A protester burns a Syriza party flag during a demonstration against the bailout deal secured by Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.<br /><br /> As the details began to emerge of the tough conditions imposed by international lenders before Greece will have access to 86 billion euros there has been an out pouring of anger.<br /><br /> Athens resident Sandra Demertzis said:<br />“It’s a catastrophic agreement, but I expected it because within the eurozone there was no way we could ever get anywhere. They are gangsters, they are financial murderers. There was no way.”<br /><br /> Some ministers laid the blame firmly at the feet of Germany and and several other eurozone countries .<br /><br /> “Yesterday, the prime minister of the country faced a coup d`etat, a coup led by Germany and other countries like the Netherlands, Finland and the Baltic countries, a coup that came to the point of blackmailing the Greek prime minister with the collapse of the banks and a complete haircut on deposits,” said Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammeno
