Fri Jun 12,
2015 2:53am EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS
Greece
hopes to clinch a deal with its lenders at a meeting of eurozone finance
ministers on June 18, the state minister said on Friday, as time runs short for
the country to stave off default at the end of the month.
The
statement by Alekos Flabouraris came a day after the International Monetary
Fund walked away from negotiations in Brussels ,
citing major differences, and a top EU leader bluntly told Athens to stop "gambling" with its
future.
A Greek
source told Reuters that the entire Greek delegation that had been negotiating
a cash-for-reform deal had also left for home on Thursday, citing continuing
disagreements.
"I
hope it (a deal) will come very soon, on June 18, when the Eurogroup takes
place," Flabouraris, a close aid to Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras,
told state television ERT.
Major
sticking points remain. Athens
has balked at measures such as curbing pension benefits and raising the value
added tax, and has pressed its lenders for more help to attempt to reduce its
debt burden.
"Whatever
we do, whatever measure we take, no matter what we do, if we don't start
addressing the debt issue, there is no chance that the Greece economy
kickstarts," said Flabouraris. "And if the Greek economy doesn't
kickstart, we cannot deal with unemployment, shops will close down."
Asked about
the upcoming IMF payment at the end of the month, Deputy Finance Minister
Dimitris Mardas told SKAI radio:
"It is
our job to be paying our obligations at the time when they are due."
(Reporting
by Angeliki Koutantou and George Georgiopoulos; Writing by Matthias Williams;
editing by Ralph Boulton)
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