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Trouble flares as Greek parliament meets

People take to the streets of Athens and rise up against proposed austerity measures being debated in the Greek Parliament on February 12, 2012. Historic buildings were set on fire during the protests against at bailout to save Greece from bankruptcy. UPI/Giorgos Moutafis
1 of 8 | People take to the streets of Athens and rise up against proposed austerity measures being debated in the Greek Parliament on February 12, 2012. Historic buildings were set on fire during the protests against at bailout to save Greece from bankruptcy. UPI/Giorgos Moutafis | License Photo

ATHENS, Greece, Feb. 12 (UPI) -- Greek riot police said they chased off demonstrators who became violent outside the parliament building where a vote was scheduled on a new austerity plan.

Tear gas and stun grenades were used to quell the violence amid wide-spread anxiety over the impact of the plan, which is linked to a needed bailout for the Greek economy, CNN said.

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The Greek prime minister gave a final warning Sunday that the nation faces economic disaster if parliament rejects a strict austerity plan.

Parliament was to vote later in the day on the controversial measure, which is tied to a major bailout of the faltering Greek economy by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

The plan includes government job cuts, pension reductions and a 22-percent cut in the minimum wage; however Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said in a televised address the alternative would be Greece being "drawn into a vortex of recession" and its eventual departure from the euro, Euronews.net said.

Despite the dire warnings, Ekathimerini, reported Sunday a number of opposition members said they would vote against the proposal. The ruling coalition government, however, seemed to have the votes needed to carry the day.

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