Strike by PPC staff to cause power cuts

Graffiti is painted on walls and the entrance of an electric station of Public Power Corporation (PPC) in Athens, on Wednesday. PPC workers are threatening with rolling strikes to protest government plans to sell a stake in the company to private investors.

Most parts of the country are expected to be without power at various points during the day on Thursday as Public Power Corporation (PPC) workers begin rolling strikes in protest at the government’s privatization plans, which Prime Minister Antonis Samaras insisted he has no intention of abandoning.

The strikes are not expected to cause a nationwide blackout but will force PPC officials to cut off power to customers throughout the day. Unionists, protesting the creation of a “small PPC” that will be sold to investors, said they want to keep the inconvenience to a minimum.

“There is no danger of a blackout,” the head of the Spartakos union, Giorgos Adamidis, told Kathimerini. “We are going on strike at all of PPC’s production units and mines from Komotini to Arcadia but nobody said that all the plants would go off line at the same time. The action will be staggered because nobody wants the country to be plunged into darkness.”

PPC will be forced to import more expensive electricity from abroad in order to ensure there is an adequate supply for as long as the strikes go on.

Samaras brushed off concerns, insisting that the government would go ahead with the spinoff, which would lead to the new company taking on 30 percent of PPC’s customers.

“There is no way I would allow fanatic populists and those who create false impressions to take away our right to progress,” said Samaras from Strasbourg. “Privatizations, among other things, are connected to our right to progress.”

The prime minister cited the example of OTE telecom’s sale as a successful privatization and denied that the government was involved in a fire sale of Greece’s best assets.

“We are trying to carry out privatizations in Greece that have been done...

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