Well, this is exactly what happened in Greece - and it wasn't a joke. Greek government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou went on TV yesterday afternoon to say that the country's public broadcaster ERT would go off the air a few hours later, because it had become a "refuge of poor transparency and waste."
As a result, ERT's almost 3,000 employees have been temporarily laid off. The Greek government says that a revamped and slimmed-down broadcaster (NERIT SA) will be up and running by the end of August. Protests were staged outside ERT's headquarters yesterday and are continuing today, while ERT journalists are still putting programmes on air via digital frequencies and the internet.
A couple of points are worth making at this stage:
- The decision to shut down ERT is clearly linked to Greece's commitment to firing 15,000 public sector workers by the end of next year under its EU-IMF bailout deal, although it's up to the Greek government to choose where to cut. Therefore, it's probably not entirely fair to blame the Troika for this (admittedly pretty extraordinary) decision;
- The fact that the Greek government prefers shutting down ERT altogether and then opening a brand-new company, instead of trimming the existing company down, could be seen as further evidence of how difficult it is to fire public sector workers in Greece - even in cases where inefficiency and waste are evident (at least according to what the Greek government spokesman said);
- On the domestic politics front, Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras has decided to go ahead with the closure of ERT despite open opposition from his coalition partners - PASOK and Democratic Left. The latter now want to submit a draft bill to scrap the decision, meaning that there is a risk of a coalition split - unless someone blinks.
We will keep monitoring the situation and give further updates on Twitter @OpenEurope.
2 comments:
Dump the BBC, save money and Great Britain simultaneously.
I agree with the analysis. It's hard to think of a valid motive even. http://karlstrobl.com/2013/06/12/democracy-is-coming-home-to-die/
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