Sat Jun 27,
2015 1:22pm EDT Related: GERMANY ,
GREECE
ATHENS/BRUSSELS
| BY KAROLINA TAGARIS AND ROBIN EMMOTT
Reuters
The euro
zone got ready to deal with a Greek debt default next week after refusing to
extend credit following Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's surprise announcement
of a referendum on an offer from creditors that his leftist government
rejected.
But the
other 18 members of the euro zone unanimously rejected the request, freezing Greece out of
further discussions with the European Central Bank and IMF on how to deal with the
fallout from a historic breach in the EU's 16-year-old currency.
The swift
rejection was a startling demonstration of the degree to which Tsipras had
alienated the rest of the currency bloc with a final-hour announcement that
upended five months of intense talks.
The
Eurogroup of finance members shut Greece 's
Yanis Varoufakis from a meeting in Brussels and
issued a statement without him, accusing Athens
of breaking off negotiations unilaterally.
"The
current financial assistance arrangement with Greece will expire on June 30,
2015, as well as all agreements related to the current Greek program," it
said, making clear its refusal of a grace period to hold the vote.
Varoufakis
said the refusal to provide an extension "will certainly damage the
credibility of the Eurogroup as a democratic union of partner member
states".
"I'm
very much afraid that damage will be permanent."
The offer
from creditors requires Greece to cut pensions and raise taxes in ways that
Tsipras has long argued would deepen one of the worst economic crises of modern
times in a country where a quarter of the workforce is already unemployed.
But voters
in other euro zone states -- including economic powerhouse, other southern
states which have suffered harsh austerity in return for EU cash and poor
eastern countries with living standards much lower than Greece -- have
lost patience.
Jeroen
Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister and chair of the Eurogroup, said Greek
lawmakers should think about whether the referendum was wise before agreeing to
hold it, essentially appealing directly to the Greek parliament to defy
Tsipras.
Worried the
country could default and even leave the euro zone, some Greeks queued up at
cash machines to withdraw funds, though there were no signs of panic in Athens . Many sounded
defiant, saying Tsipras had offered them an important chance to determine their
own fate.
The euro
zone finance ministers met in Brussels
for what had been intended as a final negotiation for a deal.
But after
they were blindsided by Tsipras's surprise middle-of-the-night announcement
that he rejected their offer and would put it to voters only after Tuesday's
deadline, one after another said all that remained to discuss was "Plan
B" - how to limit the damage of default.
"We
have no basis for further negotiations," German Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble said ahead of the meeting. "Clearly we can never rule out
surprises with Greece ,
so there can always be hope. But none of my colleagues with whom I've already
spoken see any possibilities for what we can now do."
With most
Greek banks closed for the weekend, there was no sign of panic on the streets
of Athens .
Government officials said there was no plan to impose capital controls that
would limit withdrawals.
But police
tightened security around bank teller machines as lines formed at some in the
darkness almost as soon as Tsipras's early hours televised speech was finished.
The Bank of
Greece said it was making "huge efforts" to ensure the machines
remained stocked.
One branch
of Piraeus bank that is normally open on Saturdays was shut, with around 100
people queued outside. A senior executive said the plan was to open the branch
but staff were weighing security concerns because of the queue.
After
months of wrangling with the lenders, Tsipras announced that he would put the
terms of the creditors' "humiliating" offer to a popular vote on July
5.
Tsipras
said he would respect the outcome of the vote, but he argued the lenders
demands "clearly violate European social rules and fundamental
rights", would asphyxiate Greece 's
flailing economy and aimed at the "humiliation of the entire Greek
people".
Greece's
stricken banks depend on emergency liquidity from the European Central Bank to
stay open, and the banking system faces at the very least a further flood of
withdrawals after billions have left in recent weeks.
Long lines
were reported in some supermarkets in Athens
as people stocked up with supplies.
However,
along with the worry, there were also signs of defiance and almost relief after
years of relentless austerity and seemingly endless rounds of crisis meetings
with lenders.
"The
referendum, I think, is necessary in the sense that we must send a message to
Europeans that the Greek people are not enslaved, we are no longer under
occupation," said Elias Papachadzis, a 49-year-old Athenian resident.
(Additional
reporting by Karolina Tagaris, Vassilis Triandafyllou, Matthias Williams,
Lefteris Papadimas and Gina Kalovyrna in Athens, Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin,
Robin Emmott, Alastair Macdonald, Barbara Lewis, Robert-Jan Bartunek, Philip
Blenkinsop, Alexander Saeedy, Renee Maltezou and Jan Strupczewski in Brussels;
Writing by James Mackenzie and Peter Graff; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)
Thank you a lot for sharing this with all folks you actually recognise what you
ReplyDeleteare talking approximately! Bookmarked. Please also consult with my web site =).
We may have a hyperlink change arrangement among us
my web blog - info kerja