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Police in riot-hit Greece brace for more unrest

ATHENS
Mon Dec 8, 2008 6:58pm EST

ATHENS (Reuters) - The funeral on Tuesday of a teenager shot dead by police was expected to provoke more riots in Greece following three days of the country's worst unrest in decades.

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The 15-year-old boy's killing on Saturday night has fanned public anger at unpopular economic policies and scandals as the global financial crisis reaches Greece.

Thousands of protesters burned and looted shops in central Athens and tear gas choked Syntagma Square outside the Greek parliament as police clashed with left-wing demonstrators on Monday.

More than 50 people have been hurt and scores of shops, banks and cars damaged. Police arrested about 150 people, some for looting.

The shooting victim, Alexandros Grigoropoulos, will be buried on Tuesday. Police were bracing for more violence around the funeral and during a general strike called for Wednesday.

Greece's conservative government, clinging to a slim majority despite its plummeting popularity, condemned the incidents.

"Today's picture is unacceptable for the level of our democracy," Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos told reporters after a government meeting. "We will not tolerate these events. We will do what we must."

The government denied reports it was planning to declare a state of emergency but Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis was due to meet the president and party political leaders to discuss the crisis on Tuesday.

Protests have erupted in more than 10 cities across the nation of 11 million people, including northern Thessaloniki and the tourist islands of Crete and Corfu. Greeks overseas protested in London and Berlin.

On Monday night, rioting youths took control of central Athens and set fire to the huge Christmas tree. More than 130 shops have already been destroyed in the capital, dashing retailers' hopes that Christmas would compensate for Greece's darkening economic outlook.

The shooting of Grigoropoulos kindled smoldering anger among Greek youths, resentful at a widening gap between rich and poor.

Two police officers have been charged over the shooting, one with murder and the other as an accomplice. Police said one officer fired three shots after their car was attacked by 30 youths

The officer described firing warning shots but witnesses have said he took aim at the boy. A coroner's report on Monday said it was not possible to be sure.



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