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Greek public broadcaster back on air two years after shutdown

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Greece's public broadcaster ERT came back on the air on Thursday, exactly two years after it was shut down by the previous government, which accused it of being wasteful and mismanaged.

The reinstatement of the channel -- which was replaced by a scaled-down version named Nerit -- was one of the election promises of the new government under the radical leftists Syriza, who have been in power for less than six months.

"This is an extremely important day for Greek society," the station's managing director Lambis Tagmatarchis told AFP.

"ERT is on the air, with its new logos and programme ... the goal is to regain the confidence of society," he said.

The previous conservative-led government in July 2013 shut down the TV station and fired some 2,600 people in order to meet layoff quotas laid down by Greece's international creditors.

Its sudden closure after more than 60 years of service shocked Greeks, provoked numerous demonstrations and was condemned internationally.

Former employees of the national Greek broadcaster ERT enter the broadcaster's headquarters in ...
Former employees of the national Greek broadcaster ERT enter the broadcaster's headquarters in an Athens northern suburb on May 11, 2015, demanding their jobs back
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

A news programme was the first broadcast to appear on the channel on Thursday shortly after 6:00 am (0300 GMT), with two presenters saying they were moved to be back on the air and promising that the resurrected broadcaster would be "television for the Greeks... and will not be controlled by any government."

"There is great emotion. Not because we got our jobs back, but because we have to repay the strength given to us by the Greek people these past two years," said TV host Yiannis Daras.

"We want them to scrutinise us every day, we only account to them," he said.

A celebratory concert will be held outside the ERT building in the evening.

The bill to reopen ERT was adopted by parliament in April with the backing of Syriza and its coalition partners, the Independent Greeks.

The main opposition New Democracy party voted against the legislation.

The Greek parliament voted  on April 28  2015 to reestablish the public broadcaster ERT  abruptly cl...
The Greek parliament voted on April 28, 2015 to reestablish the public broadcaster ERT, abruptly closed in 2013 as part of austerity measures
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

Under the bill, any of ERT's 2,600 employees who wish to return to work can do so and have until June 16 to submit their applications. A source at the information ministry told AFP that as of Monday 1,600 former employees said they wanted to come back.

The law set the cost of the broadcaster at 60 million euros ($68 million) a year and would be covered by a licence fee of three euros a month.

Tagmatarchis pledged to account for "every cent" paid by taxpayers.

"We are all aware that we are in deep crisis," he said.

"State TV cannot have fanfare, high wages provocative to society. Television is expensive by nature ... but one can tell the truth even with a modest budget," he added.

A year after ERT's closure it was rebranded as Nerit, with a smaller budget and 500 employees.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras made it his mission to bring back ERT, calling its closure "a crime against Greek people and democracy".

Members of Tsipras' party had refused to appear on the station whilst it operated under the Nerit logo.

Greece’s public broadcaster ERT came back on the air on Thursday, exactly two years after it was shut down by the previous government, which accused it of being wasteful and mismanaged.

The reinstatement of the channel — which was replaced by a scaled-down version named Nerit — was one of the election promises of the new government under the radical leftists Syriza, who have been in power for less than six months.

“This is an extremely important day for Greek society,” the station’s managing director Lambis Tagmatarchis told AFP.

“ERT is on the air, with its new logos and programme … the goal is to regain the confidence of society,” he said.

The previous conservative-led government in July 2013 shut down the TV station and fired some 2,600 people in order to meet layoff quotas laid down by Greece’s international creditors.

Its sudden closure after more than 60 years of service shocked Greeks, provoked numerous demonstrations and was condemned internationally.

Former employees of the national Greek broadcaster ERT enter the broadcaster's headquarters in ...

Former employees of the national Greek broadcaster ERT enter the broadcaster's headquarters in an Athens northern suburb on May 11, 2015, demanding their jobs back
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

A news programme was the first broadcast to appear on the channel on Thursday shortly after 6:00 am (0300 GMT), with two presenters saying they were moved to be back on the air and promising that the resurrected broadcaster would be “television for the Greeks… and will not be controlled by any government.”

“There is great emotion. Not because we got our jobs back, but because we have to repay the strength given to us by the Greek people these past two years,” said TV host Yiannis Daras.

“We want them to scrutinise us every day, we only account to them,” he said.

A celebratory concert will be held outside the ERT building in the evening.

The bill to reopen ERT was adopted by parliament in April with the backing of Syriza and its coalition partners, the Independent Greeks.

The main opposition New Democracy party voted against the legislation.

The Greek parliament voted  on April 28  2015 to reestablish the public broadcaster ERT  abruptly cl...

The Greek parliament voted on April 28, 2015 to reestablish the public broadcaster ERT, abruptly closed in 2013 as part of austerity measures
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP

Under the bill, any of ERT’s 2,600 employees who wish to return to work can do so and have until June 16 to submit their applications. A source at the information ministry told AFP that as of Monday 1,600 former employees said they wanted to come back.

The law set the cost of the broadcaster at 60 million euros ($68 million) a year and would be covered by a licence fee of three euros a month.

Tagmatarchis pledged to account for “every cent” paid by taxpayers.

“We are all aware that we are in deep crisis,” he said.

“State TV cannot have fanfare, high wages provocative to society. Television is expensive by nature … but one can tell the truth even with a modest budget,” he added.

A year after ERT’s closure it was rebranded as Nerit, with a smaller budget and 500 employees.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras made it his mission to bring back ERT, calling its closure “a crime against Greek people and democracy”.

Members of Tsipras’ party had refused to appear on the station whilst it operated under the Nerit logo.

AFP
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