Demonstrators celebrate Austria government collapse

AFP  |  Vienna 

After hours of chanting and whistling, thousands of demonstrators on Saturday cheered the collapse of over a corruption scandal -- and the prospect of fresh elections.

"Kurz must go" cried the crowd that had built up in Vienna's historic first district from late morning.

As the of fresh elections came through on demonstrators' later, loud cheers erupted.

Expressing a widespread view that Kurz had too often excused the scandals of his coalition partner, the far-right (FPOe) led by Heinz-Christian Strache, said the vote was "an absolute necessity".

"Anything else would have been an absolute catastrophe, politically," said Hallas, adding he hoped for a new government without the FPOe and Kurz's centre-right (OeVP).

Hallas is among those who has been turning up for anti-govermnent demonstrations held -- come rain or shine -- every Thursday for more than six months.

But as 61-year-old pointed out, "Today is a spontaneous gathering and that's rare for Austria", a country where street is not the norm.

In hidden-camera recordings published by German media Friday, Strache was seen promising public contracts in return for campaign help to a fake Russian backer over a boozy dinner in a villa on the resort island of

Isaac Heimbach, a 24-year-old biology student, said he thought the video was "just the tip of the iceberg, just a look behind the curtain" of the far-right leadership.

"I hope that this will open the eyes of Austrians who voted for the right," he said as protesters around him waved banners that read "Now it's over Mr Kurz", "You all shame this country", as well as "No place for the corrupt and power-hungry in All resign".

who works in said she had come to the chancellery to take part in "this exceptional moment".

"We need fresh elections. We can't just go back to the daily routine as if nothing happened because this is about the whole party structure, not a particular man," she said.

The OeVP will however start the upcoming election campaign in a strong position, with opinion polls before the scandal showing Kurz's popularity on the rise.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, May 19 2019. 08:05 IST