Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told his turbulent coalition government on Friday to accept a harsh international bailout deal or condemn the nation to catastrophe.
"We cannot allow Greece to go bankrupt," he told a cabinet meeting. "Our priority is to do whatever it takes to approve the new economic program and proceed with the new loan agreement."
Papademos, the sole technocrat in a coalition of feuding politicians, tried to assert his authority after six cabinet members resigned over EU and IMF demands for yet more pay, pension and job cuts in return for the financial rescue.
"It goes without saying that whoever disagrees and does not vote for the new program cannot remain in the government," he said in televised remarks.
Greece faces bankruptcy unless it gets the funds from the IMF and European Union by March 20 when it has to repay 14.5 billion euros ($19 billion) in maturing bonds.
A former central banker, Papademos tried to raise Greeks' spirits as the nation enters its fifth year of recession, saying economic growth would return in 2013 despite accusations that the austerity is merely driving Greece into a downward spiral.
Any alternative to the rescue would be much worse, he said in opening remarks using the word "catastrophe" four times.
"The social cost that the program entails will be limited, compared with the economic and social catastrophe which would follow if we don't adopt it," he said.
Earlier, far-right leader George Karatzaferis said he could not back the tough terms attached to a 130 billion euro bailout and all four cabinet members of his LAOS party submitted their resignations, along with two from the socialist PASOK party.
However, Papademos was not expected to react immediately to the loss of his transport minister and five deputy ministers.
"There will be no reshuffle today," said a government official who declined to be named.
Adding to the confusion, Greek media said that two of the LAOS cabinet members had resigned only under orders from Karatzaferis and would support the deeply unpopular package when parliament votes, possibly on Sunday or Monday.
The Socialist PASOK party, one of three in the "national unity" government called on its lawmakers to vote for the bailout, and analysts said they still thought parliament would pass the deeply unpopular package.
UNSTABLE POLITICS
But Greek politics remained highly unstable and unpredictable in the run up to the parliamentary vote.
Outside parliament, police fired tear gas at black-masked protesters who threw petrol bombs, stones and bottles at the start of a 48-hour general strike against the cuts ordered by the "troika" of international lenders. But the street protests were relatively small compared to last year's mass rallies.
A group of 35 lawmakers from PASOK, whose public support has collapsed, protested against pressure applied by eurozone ministers, who have told Athens it will get no aid unless it accepts the austerity conditions.
"Our lenders are once again presenting the dilemma: either you take the measures or you lead the country to a default," they said in a protest letter.
The biggest police trade union said it would issue arrest warrants for Greece's international lenders for subverting democracy, and refused to "fight against our brothers."
A daily newspaper depicted German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a Nazi uniform with a swastika armband.
Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos made clear Greece has little choice but to accept the harsh conditions attached to the bailout, and a plan to halve its huge debt to private bondholders, to avoid a chaotic default next month.
"It's time for us to make up our minds," he said after eurozone finance ministers refused to give immediate approval to the bailout plan.
"Unfortunately, we have to choose between sacrifices and even bigger sacrifices."
LAOS leader Karatzaferis begged to differ. "Greeks cannot be hostages and serfs," he thundered. "We were robbed of our dignity, we were humiliated. I can't take this. I won't allow it, no matter how hungry I am."
Karatzaferis turned his anger on Germany, which will fund much of any bailout and has lectured Greeks on the need to tighten their belts.
"Germany decides for Europe because it has a fat wallet and with that fat wallet it rules over the lives of all the southern countries," he told a news conference.
His party has 15 deputies in the 300-seat parliament, dominated by the socialist PASOK and conservative New Democracy parties, which both support the Papademos government.
The EU and IMF have been exasperated by a series of broken promises and weeks of disagreement over the terms of the bailout, which would be Greece's second since 2010, with time running out to avoid a default.
The ministers gave Athens six days to prove its commitment by passing key legislation, finding an extra 325 million euros in savings, and providing assurances that the program will remain in force after any election.
Summing up their deep mistrust, Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of eurozone finance ministers, said: "In short, no disbursement before implementation."
The euro and European shares fell, reflecting concern that the Greek bailout and debt swap could fail.
"RESIST!"
The austerity plan includes lowering the minimum wage by 22 percent, axing 150,000 public sector jobs and reducing pensions.
Some protesters compared Greece's plight, facing bankruptcy unless it accedes to the demands of international lenders, to its seven years under military dictatorship.
On Syntagma Square in central Athens, songs from the struggle in the 1960s and 1970 against a junta of colonels boomed out over loudspeakers.
Police said three policemen and two protesters were slightly injured in clashes. Five people were detained.
With Greece probably at its lowest ebb since the junta was overthrown in 1974 and democracy restored, protesters denounced the "troika" of lenders - the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund.
"Do not bow your heads! Resist!" They chanted. "No to layoffs! No to salary cuts! No to pension cuts!
Analysts say only a breakdown of party discipline can sink the package in parliament, where the coalition has a huge majority.
"There will most likely be a string of defections and abstentions but I don't believe that the measures will fall short of the majority required," political analyst George Sefertzis told Reuters.
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