Second round of strikes hits Madrid

A teacher taking part in a demonstration against proposed budget cuts in public education wears a pair of scissors on his head to symbolise the cuts in central Madrid.

A teacher taking part in a demonstration against proposed budget cuts in public education wears a pair of scissors on his head to symbolise the cuts in central Madrid.

Published Oct 5, 2011

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Madrid - Madrid secondary school teachers launched a second round of strikes on Tuesday to protest what they say is an attempt by the local centre-right government to use the debt crisis to strangle public schools and benefit private ones.

By asking public high school teachers for two extra classroom hours a week, Madrid's regional government - run by the People's Party (PP) which is expected to win general elections in November - said it can save 80-million euros on extra staff.

Spain's ruling Socialists have implemented a range of austerity measures in the past year to avoid having to seek a bailout like Greece's, but unions fear a PP victory in November will bring even more painful cuts in a country where one in five is unemployed.

“The unions are concerned that a PP victory is really going to clamp down and not be very sympathetic to their cause in general. This is really a preventive strike in a way,” Charles Powell, a historian at Madrid's San Pablo-CEU University said.

Spain, like other countries in the euro zone, is aggressively cutting spending to reduce the public deficit.

Thousands marched through central Madrid on Tuesday evening, a day after hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets in Greece to protest further budget cuts as their country teeters on the brink of bankruptcy.

Parents, teachers and students dressed in green, the official colour of the protests, waved banners in the shape of scissors as they marched into Madrid's central Puerta de Sol square.

“This isn't a labour strike against a couple of hours of extra work. We're teachers and parents who are defending a social model,” a protester named Jose Luis said.

Unions said Tuesday's strike, which was set to continue on Wednesday, had more than 70 percent participation. Teachers also went on strike for two days in September and plan a final walkout on October 20. - Reuters

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