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Huge protest over Irish economy | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Up to 100,000 people have gathered in Dublin city centre to protest at the Irish government's handling of the country's recession. | |
Many are angry at plans to impose a pension levy on public sector workers. | Many are angry at plans to impose a pension levy on public sector workers. |
Trade union organisers of the march said workers did not cause the economic crisis but were having to pay for it. | |
In a statement, the Irish government said it recognised that the measures it was taking were "difficult and in some cases painful". | |
The pension levy was "reasonable", the government said. reflecting "the reality that we are not in a position to continue to meet the public service pay bill in the circumstances of declining revenue". | |
High unemployment | |
There were conflicting estimates of the numbers of people at the march, which began on the north side of Dublin in the mid-afternoon. | |
Police said 100,000 people were on the streets, while organisers said they expected 200,000 to protest in total. I've a mortgage to pay, I've children to put through school, and now I'm being told I have to take cut back, after cut back, after cut back Irish protester | |
The Irish Congress of Trade Unions (Ictu), which organised the march, said it was campaigning for "a fairer and better way" of dealing with the economic crisis. | |
"Our priority is about ensuring that people are looked after, the interests of people are looked after, not the interests of big business or the wealthy," Sally-Anne Kinahan, Ictu's secretary general, told the BBC. | |
One protester said he was "sick and tired of the way this government conducts itself and what it's doing to this country." | One protester said he was "sick and tired of the way this government conducts itself and what it's doing to this country." |
"I've worked all my life, I've never broke the law, never walked out on strike. Instead I've went to work and done my job," he said. | "I've worked all my life, I've never broke the law, never walked out on strike. Instead I've went to work and done my job," he said. |
"I've a mortgage to pay, I've children to put through school, and now I'm being told I have to take cutback, after cutback, after cutback." | |
Ireland, which was once one of Europe's fastest-growing economies, has fallen into recession faster than many other members of the European Union. | |
The country officially fell into recession in September 2008, and unemployment has risen sharply in the following months. | |
The numbers of people claiming unemployment benefit in the Irish Republic rose to 326,000 in January, the highest monthly level since records began in 1967. |