Athens, 31 July 2010 (MIA) - Greek authorities struggled to restore fuel supplies on Saturday after failing to break a six-day trucker strike that has disrupted travel at the peak of the busy tourism season.
Military trucks and petrol company vehicles were employed to alleviate the fuel shortage as over 30,000 lorry and tanker truck operators sat out a government requisition order to return to work on pain of prosecution, AFP reported.
Officials said the situation was improving in the main cities of Athens and Thessaloniki, but shortages were still reported on many holiday islands and destinations in northern Greece where thousands of tourists are stranded.
"If the trucks are able to load at refineries during the weekend a measure of supply should be restored by Monday," the chairman of Greek petrol station owners' federation Michalis Kiousis told Flash Radio.
Police units were escorting trucks to refineries to prevent interference from strikers, Net public television reported.
Five people including a police officer were injured on Thursday in a clash between striking truckers and riot police outside a refinery near Thessaloniki, northern Greece, the Athens News Agency reported.
Military trucks are resupplying critical sectors such as airports, electricity plants and hospitals, the government said.
A broad range of businesses from tourism car rentals to fruit growers have been badly hit by the protest which began on Sunday against plans by the government to liberalise the tightly-controlled freight sector.
But authorities warn that the greatest damage has been caused to the vital tourism industry which accounts for nearly a fifth of the recession-hit Greek economy, with thousands of travellers stranded by the protest and booking cancellations mounting.
"The period to August 15 is the heart of the tourism season and an entire week has now been lost," the head of the Greek trade association Vassilis Korkidis told Net television.
"Gas stations have dried up," senior gas station unionist Dimitris Makryvelios told the broadcaster. "Nobody is going to risk travelling if the market is not stabilised."
Reports poured in of foreign holidaymakers abandoning their immobilised rented cars while motorists in northern Greece have tried to bypass the deadlock by seeking fuel in neighbouring Bulgaria and Macedonia.
The protest has also badly hit the peach industry, a staple Greek export, with over a dozen canneries shutting down for lack of fuel, the head of Greece's cannery association said.
"The harvest and processing of peaches only lasts a few days and this is peak season for us," association chairman Costas Apostolou told the Ta Nea newspaper.
"This is a disaster," he added, noting that over 35 tonnes of peaches worth around 20 million euros had to be destroyed.
The truckers on Friday decided to maintain their protest, ignoring warnings by the government that strikers who continue to defy the law would be prosecuted and that their operating licenses could be forfeit.
The truckers say that boosting competition in the freight sector by reducing new licence charges is unfair to existing operators who have already paid high start-up fees running up to EUR300,000($391,000 dollars).
The plan is part of a reform programme that the Athens government committed to in May in exchange for a EUR110bn ($143bn) loan package from the International Monetary Fund and European Union.
Greece has suffered waves of strikes and protests over the unprecedented budget cuts and reforms the government had to agree to in order to tap the IMF-EU money it desperately needed to avert default on debts close to EUR300 billion. lk/fd/14:51
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