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Greeks march on the anniversary of the 1973 student revolt against the junta

On Monday, thousands of Greeks marched in Athens to commemorate the anniversary of the violently suppressed student uprising of 1973 which helped overthrow the military junta ruling the country at the time.

Many Greeks use the annual march towards the United States embassy, which they accuse of being supportive of the military dictatorship of 1967-1974, as a rallying point to protest against government policies.

Youths carried a bloodstained flag, which belonged to students who took part in the revolt of 1973. When they arrived at the heavily guarded embassy that was blocked off by rows of police vehicles, the youths chanted the National Anthem.

Some demonstrators carried carnations, while others chanted slogans of solidarity with Palestinians.

More than 5,000 police officers were deployed in Athens. Before the march, dozens of people were detained and 11 were arrested.

People laid carnations and wreaths at the Athens Polytechnic earlier, the site of a bloody crackdown on November 17, when tanks of the army smashed the building's gates to crush the protests of students against the colonels who ruled Greece at that time. Dozens of people were killed.

The revolution marked the end of the military junta. (Reporting and editing by Michele Kambas and Rod Nickel; Reporting by Renee Maltezou)

(source: Reuters)