Greek debt crisis: Clashes during austerity strike Published duration 12 November 2015

media caption Greek youths clash with police during austerity strike

Greek workers are staging their first general strike against austerity since Alexis Tsipras's left-wing Syriza government came to power in January.

Brief clashes were reported in Athens, as youths broke away from the main protest near parliament.

The main unions appealed for members to walk out against the terms of Greece's third eurozone bailout

The government agreed to push through tax rises and spending cuts in return for €86bn (£60bn) in rescue loans.

As protesters gathered in Athens, public services were hit and some transport services ground to a halt.

MPs have already voted to raise the retirement age and get rid of most early retirement benefits, and reduced rates of sales tax on some of the big Greek islands have been scrapped.

But the main civil servants' union ADEDY and the GSEE private sector union objected to proposals to scale back supplementary pensions and merge pension funds. They were joined by communist-affiliated union PAME.

In Athens, reports said dozens of young people dressed in black threw petrol bombs and broke shop windows near the main parliamentary building in Syntagma Square.

Small fires were also seen at the entrance to the Bank of Greece headquarters. Police then responded with tear gas.

Metro, ferry and suburban rail services were shut down, schools were closed and hospitals had only emergency staff levels. Buses and trolley buses were providing limited services.

Museums and archaeological sites were shut and news bulletins, newspapers and websites were disrupted because journalists had walked out.

image copyright AP image caption Protesters from the communist-affiliated PAME union rallied in central Athens (12 Nov)

image copyright AFP image caption A limited bus service was running in Thessaloniki but banks were shut

Although general strikes became regular events in Greece in the years following its first eurozone bailout in 2010, this was the first called since Syriza came to power.

After reluctantly agreeing to Greece's third international bailout in five years in August, Mr Tsipras called an election and was returned to power in September with 35% of the vote

Despite agreeing to a series of reforms, Greek officials are currently locked in a dispute with eurozone officials over bad home loans.

The Athens government is trying to avoid indebted Greeks losing their homes, but creditors want an agreement on a mechanism for tackling non-performing home-loans before they unlock €10bn to recapitalise Greek banks. A separate €2bn bailout instalment is also at stake.