Greece and its international creditors remained at loggerheads yesterday over reform measures that Athens must introduce to unlock billions of euros in loans and prevent a likely bankruptcy of the country.
At talks in Brussels, leaders from the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission reached agreement on the kind of reforms needed to secure Greece a financial lifeline.
But Greece was still not on board, preferring a compromise reached in previous meetings, raising fresh doubts about whether it is possible to clinch a deal before Athens must make a payment to the IMF on Tuesday.
An EU official said a “set of proposals, agreed upon unanimously by the institutions, has been forwarded” to finance ministers from the 19 nations using the single currency. The official, who declined to be named with the negotiations still in flux, said that this “can form the basis of an agreement.”
But a Greek government official said that Athens remains “steadfast in support of the proposals that formed the basis for talks several days ago.”
“The Greek side has shown responsibility and the will to find an agreement. The responsibility of each party involved will now be determined,” the official said.
The latest gambit came after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras met with the lenders under pressure to seal a deal before facing other European Union leaders at a summit.
Tsipras is also under massive pressure from Greeks themselves as the compromises suggested so far will mean fresh hardship for citizens already suffering the impact of past austerity measures to bring public spending back into line.
Representatives from almost every Greek party were in Brussels, following developments blow by blow, to see whether they would be able to back any new deal in the Greek parliament, where a vote must pass by Monday.
“We are at a critical moment,” Greek Labor Minister Panos Skourletis warned on private Antenna television.
“There are issues that for us are paramount — that must be included in an agreement. These are tackling the debt so that it can go on a sustainable course, and the financing of the economy,” he said.
A senior lawmaker in Tsipras’ radical left governing party denounced the international demands for new spending cuts as “blackmail.”
“The effort to restore exhausting measures shows the blackmail and pressure against Greece is culminating,” Syriza party parliamentary spokesman Nikos Filis said on Mega television.
Greece has a 1.6 billion-euro (USD1.8 billion) debt to pay on Tuesday which it cannot afford unless the creditors unfreeze 7.2 billion euros (8.1 billion dollars) in bailout money.
A failure to reach agreement with its creditors and a default on its debts could force Greece out of the eurozone, which would be hugely painful for the country. Some experts say it could be manageable for Europe and the world economy, but that remains unclear and any failure would likely shake global markets.
As the meetings were getting underway yesterday in Brussels, the Athens stock exchange fell 2.1 percent minutes after opening, but later recovered and was marginally up 0.6 percent in late morning trading. Derek Gatopoulos and Lorne Cook, Brussels, AP
Greece, creditors at loggerheads as debt deadline looms
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