Striking Greek taxi drivers tried to placate angry tourists Tuesday, giving them a free ride into the western town of Patras and letting them enter a major archaeological site on the island of Crete without paying. The protesters have been on strike for 16 days against government plans to issue new taxi licences — part of efforts to revive Greece's ailing economy by liberalizing restricted business sectors. Existing drivers say this will make their jobs unviable by reducing their take. But the taxi-driver protests over the weekend, blocking major roads and airports and preventing tourists from visiting antiquities, caused a public outcry, with government and the tourism industry accusing them of crippling the country's top revenue earner at the height of the summer season. Travellers arriving at major airports, including Athens, have had to use private drivers working clandestinely as cabs or public transport to get into town.