By Harry
Papachristou and Renee Maltezou
(Reuters) -
The leader of Greece 's
leftist SYRIZA party on Tuesday ruled out forming a government with pro-bailout
parties after June 17 elections that could decide the nation's future in the
euro zone.
Instead,
SYRIZA chief Alexis Tsipras said that, if elected, he would lead a government
of the left against the painful austerity measures demanded by the European
Union and the International Monetary Fund.
Tsipras,
who wants to scrap a 130 billion euro ($162 billion) bailout deal signed in
March, rejected what he called an "all-party ragtag" following calls
for a unity government in case next week's vote proves as inconclusive as the
last one held in May.
"After
two consecutive elections, people demand a clear direction," he said.
The leader
of the Socialist PASOK party, Evangelos Venizelos, said at the weekend that Greece risked
social unrest unless all parties were involved in making the hard decisions
which lay ahead.
The last
opinion polls published before a pre-election blackout showed SYRIZA running
neck-and-neck with the conservative New Democracy party, which wants only minor
adjustments to the bailout.
No party
appears strong enough to form a government alone.
Tsipras, a
37 year-old civil engineer who shot from obscurity to international prominence
after the May election, repeated his pledge to keep Greece in the euro zone, despite
his promise to renege on the bailout accord.
"We
will take the responsibility of governing the country and guaranteeing a
stable, safe and just course for the people within the euro zone," he
said.
The dire
consequences for the Greek economy of being forced out of the single currency
have prompted speculation that Tsipras could back down if elected, but he gave
no hint of softening during a press conference just days before the crucial
election.
SYRIZA, a
party forged from 12 more or less radical leftist groups, has surfed a tide of
popular anger after five years of recession and some of the harshest austerity
measures ever imposed on a modern European economy.
If elected,
Tsipras promised he would halve his own salary as prime minister, scarp
benefits for politicians and bring Greece 's battered banking sector
under state control.
"If we
are elected, we will move swiftly to recapitalize banks with common voting
shares, what we call socialization of the banking system, put them under public
and social control so that Greek depositors feel safe," he said.
Underlining
the drastic state of Greece 's
public finances, the Finance Ministry reported that the central government
budget deficit widened by 4.5 percent in the first five years to 10.9 billion
euros.
(Editing by
Alessandra Rizzo)
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