Four thousand state employees face dismissal this year
A day-long general strike has begun in Greece, called by trade unions, in protest against government plans to cut thousands of public sector jobs.
The government needs to pass a bill this week in order to start receiving 6.8bn euros (£5.8bn) of fresh bailout loans to keep the country afloat.
Hospitals and public transport are expected to be affected by the strike.
Demonstrations have been building for several days over the latest set of deeply unpopular austerity measures.
Greece's international creditors demanded the cuts in order to approve the latest batch of loans from its international bailout programme, as agreed earlier this month. They said that Greece's reform programme was moving too slowly.
Under the planned bill, which comes to a vote in parliament on Wednesday, more than 4,000 state employees, including teachers and local government workers, face dismissal this year, with another 11,000 civil servants affected in 2014.
The employees will have an eight-month period on 75% of their salaries to be redeployed by which point, if they are not transferred to another department, they will face redundancy.
Previous austerity measures have made cuts to salaries and pensions in the public sector.
'Painful adjustment'Greece has witnessed mounting protests over the cuts, with Tuesday's strike - the fourth this year - expected to disrupt flights, rail travel and hospital services.
Trade unions have called on civil servants to attend a rally outside parliament in Athens, with further protests expected in Greece's second largest city, Thessaloniki.
The unions promise they will not give up without a fight, says the BBC's Chris Morris in the Greek capital.
But the government says it now has no choice but to enforce further painful adjustment, he adds, in a country where unemployment is at record levels and the economy has shrunk dramatically since the bailout programme began.
"We are not opposed to reform...What we do oppose is abolishing entire institutions like the municipal police and personnel to guard state schools,'' said Costas Askounis, leader of the protesting Central Union of Municipalities.
Greece has an unemployment rate of 27% and public unrest has lead to political instability, and four different Greek governments in as many years.
The country has been dependent on loans from the European Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank, since May 2010.
On Tuesday, the Greek parliament voted in favour of prosecuting former Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou over allegations he tampered with a list of 2,000 suspected tax evaders. Mr Papaconstantinou has denied any wrongdoing.
Correspondents say tax evasion is a major problem in Greece and one of the main reasons for its financial crisis.
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Source: BBC News - Business http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-23324336#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa