"The months following the elections were extremely hard. Never before has the government, which received a clear popular mandate, faced such a war waged against authorities from within and from abroad," he told Athens residents, adding that it is an undeclared war.
The aim of this campaign is straightforward, according to the official. These forces seek to "undermine public trust for the government forcing it to go back on its word and break election promises," he explained.
The labor minister pointed out that the government is doing its best to tackle the humanitarian crisis. It introduced a law on income support and will not cut wages and pensions. Pension supplements amounting to some $180 will also stay.
"The government will deliver on its promise. Syriza is a hard nut to crack. We will not back down," he said.
The Greek minister added that adversaries of the current authorities are trying to bring the government under control so that it would translate laws sent via email from English into Greek and put them to vote, like it had done before.
#Austerity or bloody war. We have seen negotiations like this before. Hoping #Greece has the nerve to free itself from the eurozone tyrants.
— IrishRepublicanNews (@repnews) 12 июня 2015
"The Greek people must unite [in the face of these developments]," he said.