VIDEO: Woman Freaks Out Major European Official With Surprise Protest

An activist stands on the table of the podium throwing paper at ECB President Mario Draghi, left covered, during a press conference of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Wednesday, April 15, 2015. (AP P... An activist stands on the table of the podium throwing paper at ECB President Mario Draghi, left covered, during a press conference of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Wednesday, April 15, 2015. (AP Photo/Michael Probst) MORE LESS

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — It was supposed to be the European Central Bank’s first calm meeting in months. President Mario Draghi was to explain how smoothly the bank’s stimulus program was going.

But just as he began his press conference, a protester startled participants by running from the first row of seats and leaping onto the table in front of him. She hurled what appeared to be confetti and screamed, “End the ECB dictatorship!”

Security guards dragged her off the stage in seconds and took Draghi into a side room.

Draghi returned minutes later looking a little shaken but resumed his statement and then answered questions for an hour, at the end earning a small round of applause from the press corps for his composure. An ECB statement said “the activist registered as a journalist for a news organization she does not represent.”

The bank said she went through a metal detector and x-ray of her bag before entering.

Some left-wing activists have accused the ECB of enforcing budget austerity measures on eurozone countries, such as Greece, that are under financial bailout programs. EU leaders have also been criticized for appointing too few women to its top leadership positions.

Draghi, who didn’t comment on the disruption, said in his statement that the bank was determined to pursue its existing bond-buying 1.1 trillion euro ($1.2 trillion) stimulus program “until the end of September 2016 and, in any case, until we see a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation.” Inflation at minus 0.1 percent is way below the ECB’s aim of 2 percent, and a sign of a weak economy.

There was some speculation that because of recent improvement in economic indicators in the 19-country eurozone the ECB might end its stimulus program before that date.

Draghi was at pains to firmly quash any such talk.

He used an analogy to running, saying it was “like asking after the first K, are we going to finish this marathon?” K is runner’s jargon for kilometer; a marathon is just over 42 kilometers, or 26.2 miles.

Draghi also urged eurozone governments to get busy with long-term reforms to make their countries more business-friendly and promote growth. “Reforms and actions to improve the business environment for firms need to gain momentum in several countries,” he said.

In response to a question from a youth group in attendance about Europe’s high rate of youth unemployment, Draghi said the time was long overdue to end a two-track system that sees young people bearing the brunt of layoffs and downturns. “The present situation of the labor market is something that should be overcome, should have been overcome many years ago,” he said.

The jobless rate for the entire eurozone is 11.3 percent, but for under-25s it is 51.7 percent in Greece, 50.2 percent in Spain, and 42.6 percent in Italy. Worker protections are often skewed toward older, established members of the labor force, leaving younger people with diminished chances.

The ECB is buying 60 billion euros in government and corporate bonds using newly created money. Increasing the supply of money in the economy can raise inflation. The stimulus is also lowering market borrowing rates, which tends to boost lending and, by extension, economic activity. The U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England and Bank of Japan have also used bond purchases, or quantitative easing, in this way.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Hahahaha…she’s too cute for me to care about her politics…

  2. Cute, maybe; but otherwise unemployed.

    That’s 3 Eurozone countries with massive young people unemployment: Greece, Spain, Italy. What are those youngsters doing then? A lot of are going into advanced drunken vandalizing hooliganism; some, outright crime as a business; and, I should think, a significant percentage of them into fascist political organizations.

    The STIM, quantitative easing and new pizza economy prevented or delayed most of that here. But if a GOPer gets into the WH, or whoever’s in the WH kowtows to Wall Street banksters, we’ll be right with them.

  3. The irony being that after years of idiotic sado-austerianism, Draghi, at least, is finally doing the right thing.

    Now if only the fucking Germans would get it through their fucking heads that Aesop’s fable about the ant and the grasshopper isn’t an economic philosophy and that Hitler wasn’t able to seize power because of hyper-inflation that happened years earlier, but, rather, managed to seize power because of the economic devastation caused by savage austerity policies imposed by the Bruning government out of fear of inflation.

  4. What snivelers! Terrified of a young girl with confetti. Satan take them all …

  5. Avatar for paulw paulw says:

    That story really works hard not to say anything usable. Good job, AP. Protestors aren’t accusing the ECB of enforcing austerity on countries with “bailout” plans, that’s in the record. What they’re accusing it of is injuring the people in those countries by enforcing austerity. And those “business-friendly” “reforms”, what might they be? Do tell.

    Note also: protestor not shot, tased or removed indefinitely to an undisclosed location.

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