ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A march by thousands of people
through central Athens to mark the anniversary of the fatal police shooting of
an unarmed teenager quickly turned violent Saturday, as marchers damaged
storefronts and bus stations and set fire to clothes looted from a shop.
Clashes continued late into the night in the
neighborhood of Exarchia, a haven for extreme leftists and anarchists, with
youths ambushing police forces with firebombs and rocks thrown from balconies.
Police said they detained 211 people.
Clashes also broke out between police and
demonstrators marching in the northern city of Thessaloniki. Police fired tear
gas and stun grenades after a crowd beat up two plainclothes policemen.
The marches were commemorating the Dec. 6, 2008, police
killing of 15-year-old Alexandros Grigoropoulos in the capital, which led to
two weeks of the most violent rioting Greece had seen in decades.
Grigoropoulos
and friends were in an argument with two police officers when one officer went
to his patrol car, retrieved his gun and shot the youth.
Grigoropoulos' killer, police officer Epaminondas
Korkoneas, is serving a life sentence.
On Saturday, about 5,000 people marched in Athens,
passing the Greek Parliament and heading toward the spot where Grigoropoulos
was killed, police said. At one point, people broke into a Zara clothes shop,
took racks of clothes into the street and burned them.
The clashes were soon confined to Exarchia
neighborhood. Police cordoned off the neighborhood's central square, firing tear
gas and pepper spray.
The marches come at a time when nearly nightly
violent protests are being held by supporters of one of Grigoropoulos' friends,
jailed anarchist and convicted bank robber Nikos Romanos, 21.
He was present
when Grigoropoulos was killed and is now on a hunger strike, demanding prison
leave to attend lectures after he passed university entrance exams.
Romanos, currently hospitalized under police guard,
has been on the hunger strike since last month, and doctors have said his
health is failing. He was jailed with three young men following a February 2013
bank robbery in which they took a hostage as they tried to escape.
He was
sentenced in October to 15 years and 11 months for the robbery and faces two
more trials as an alleged member of an armed anarchist group.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will meet with
Romanos' parents on Monday following a request made through their lawyer on
Saturday, the government said.

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