10,000 march in Dublin against next Irish budget

 
No Author Published: November 24, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

DUBLIN (AP) — About 10,000 socialist protesters marched Saturday through Dublin in opposition to government plans to unveil Ireland's sixth straight austerity budget.

photo -   Irish protesters fill Dublin's O'Connell Street in both directions during an anti-austerity march Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012. The government says it will unveil Ireland's sixth straight austerity budget next month in hopes of reducing the country's 2013 deficit to 8.6 percent, still nearly triple the spending limit that eurozone members are supposed to observe. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)
Irish protesters fill Dublin's O'Connell Street in both directions during an anti-austerity march Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012. The government says it will unveil Ireland's sixth straight austerity budget next month in hopes of reducing the country's 2013 deficit to 8.6 percent, still nearly triple the spending limit that eurozone members are supposed to observe. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

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The capital's major boulevard, O'Connell Street, was filled in both directions with marchers, some donning ghostly white masks and Santa hats.

The demonstrators were from a wide range of anti-tax campaigns, labor unions and community groups, most of them with a hard-left bent. Many bore banners denouncing government leaders and vowing not to pay new and future tax hikes.

"The government can't be given a free hand to cut whatever they like. You have to be willing to get out on the streets and do something," said Lizzy Stringer, a 26-year-old school assistant who marched in a hand-made protest suit emblazoned with words summarizing the personal despair behind Ireland's debt crisis: hunger, depression, suicide.

The parade mixed darker themes with gallows humor. A rider on horseback in white mask and black cape depicting Death led the parade, while the horse had a "no to austerity" banner round its neck.

On placards Irish leaders were portrayed as serpents, with pleas to St. Patrick to return and banish them from Ireland. Marchers donned Santa hats, some bearing the slogan "No no no!" rather than ho ho ho, and warned that the government wanted to play Grinch and steal Christmas.

Ireland faces more protests in the buildup to the Dec. 5 budget, when the government of Prime Minister Enda Kenny is committed to unveiling a further €3.5 billion ($4.5 billion) in spending cuts and tax hikes in this country of 4.6 million.

Ireland already has pledged to keep imposing annual cuts and tax hikes through at least 2015 as part of its austerity program, begun in 2009, to combat yawning deficits and fund a colossally expensive bank rescue program. Ireland's long-booming economy plunged in 2008 as credit-fueled property speculation collapsed, forcing Ireland to nationalize five of its six banks.

Ireland faced the risk of national bankruptcy in 2010 when it was forced to negotiate an international bailout. The last of the €67.5 billion borrowed from European Union partners and the International Monetary Fund is scheduled to be spent next year, by which time Ireland is supposed to be borrowing normally again on bond markets. It has begun to dip its toe back into those markets since the summer.

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