Tue Jun 16,
2015 4:42pm EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS/BERLIN
| BY LEFTERIS PAPADIMAS AND ERIK KIRSCHBAUM
Reuters
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras accused Greece 's
creditors on Tuesday of trying to "humiliate" Greeks with more cuts
as he defied a growing drumbeat of warnings that Europe
was preparing for his country to leave the euro.
The
unrepentant address to lawmakers after the collapse of talks with European and
IMF lenders at the weekend was the clearest sign yet that the leftist leader
has no intention of making a last-minute U-turn and accepting austerity cuts
needed to unlock frozen aid and avoid a debt default within two weeks.
Financial
markets, for months indifferent to wrangling over releasing billions of euros
of aid for Greece ,
reacted with mounting alarm.
European
stock markets hit their lowest level since February and the risk premium on
bonds of other vulnerable euro zone states leapt in one of the sharpest
episodes of contagion since the height of Europe 's
debt crisis in 2012.
The White
House warned that agreement was needed to avoid shaking financial markets
further and Tsipras assured U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew that Athens aimed
to bridge the differences with creditors.
But with
senior German lawmakers now openly discussing the once-taboo prospect of a
"Grexit" from the single currency area, his fiery words suggested
confrontation rather than reconciliation.
"I'm
certain future historians will recognise that little Greece, with its little
power, is today fighting a battle beyond its capacity not just on its own
behalf but on behalf of the people of Europe," he said in a televised
speech to legislators in his Syriza party, drawing loud applause.
Tsipras
charged that the lenders were politically motivated in demanding pension cuts
and tax hikes that hurt the poor, and their aim was to "humiliate not only
the Greek government - this would be the least important - but humiliate an
entire people".
European
Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker reacted angrily, accusing the Greek
prime minister of misleading the public and insisting that he had made clear
that he was personally against hiking taxes on power and pharmaceuticals.
"And the prime minister knows that," he said.
The
rhetoric from Athens left it unclear whether Tsipras was preparing to default
and risk economic collapse as the price of standing firm, or betting - wrongly
according to creditors - on a last-minute effort by Europe to save Greece.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has held repeated phone calls with Tsipras in
recent weeks to press him to agree on reforms with EU/IMF negotiators, struck a
despondent note, saying it was unclear if a deal could be found when euro zone
finance ministers meet on Thursday in Luxembourg.
"Unfortunately,
there is little new to report," she told a news conference, repeating that
Greece
must meet its obligations. "I have always said I want to do everything
possible to keep Greece
in the euro zone. I remain dedicated to that."
DEFAULT,
GREXIT LOOM
That could
begin if the government had to impose capital controls to stem a bank run and
was obliged to pay wages, pensions and suppliers in IOUs because of a shortage
of euros.
Lawmakers
in Merkel's conservative party and her centre-left coalition partners were more
blunt than the chancellor in warning that a Greek euro zone exit was on the
cards.
"In
the event a solid reform package is not presented, then a 'Grexit' would have
to be accepted if necessary," said Michael Grosse-Broemer, a senior
lawmaker in Merkel's Christian Democrats. "I'm not so sure any more if the
Greek government is really interested in averting damage for the people of Greece ."
Finnish
Prime Minister Juha Sipila, whose country is among the most hawkish creditors,
said it would take "a miracle" to reach a solution next week, but
that was still everyone's aim.
European
Commission Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis said publicly that euro zone
members were discussing what might happen if Greece failed to agree on a deal
with lenders.
The bloc
has no legal basis for forcing a country out, but Athens might end up with a de facto parallel
currency, paving the way for a formal exit from the euro.
Though all
sides - Athens
and the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF - want to avoid such
a scenario, all have dug themselves into entrenched positions blaming the other
side for the collapse of talks at last weekend.
With trust
between the two sides now badly damaged, there were fears the situation could
slip out of control.
"What
is absolute, is that the timeframe is very tight now and even with the best
will in the world, on tight timeframes accidents can happen," Irish
Finance Minister Michael Noonan told a parliamentary committee in Dublin .
Officials
from the Eurogroup Working Group held a conference call in the afternoon to
prepare the ground for Thursday's finance ministers meeting, but no new
progress was made, according to sources.
EU
officials denied reports that any emergency summit of euro zone leaders was
being planned for next Sunday. If anything, the Eurogroup finance ministers
might meet again.
With
speculation gripping markets, officials denied a report in German daily Bild
that Athens was
planning to delay the June 30 payment to the IMF by six months. Officials
earlier denied a Sueddeutsche Zeitung story that preparations were under way
for capital controls to be imposed as early as next weekend.
CLOSE TO
LIMITS
There was
little sign of public panic in Athens ,
but increasingly worried leaders of pro-euro opposition parties sought
briefings from Tsipras and implored him to strike a deal swiftly to prevent an
economic collapse.
"I
called on the prime minister to consider that the Greek economy is desperately
close to its limits," Stavros Theodorakis, leader of the centrist To
Potami party, the fourth-biggest in parliament, said after meeting the prime
minister.
He said
Tsipras had assured him there were still "two or three" steps Athens could take to
break the deadlock in the talks, provided the creditors also gave ground. The
17 lawmakers Theodorakis commands would vote for any deal in parliament that
kept Greece
in the euro, he added.
Faced with
a backlash within Syriza over concessions sought by the lenders, the support of
parties like Potami and the centre-left PASOK could prove crucial for Tsipras
in voting through any deal.
Officially,
Syriza has ruled out such an option, saying an agreement must pass with the
support of its own lawmakers.
In a
last-ditch effort to repair the breakdown, Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann
is due in Athens
on Wednesday after coordinating with Juncker.
(Additional
reporting by Michael Shields in Vienna and
Andrius Sytas in Vilnius ,
Writing by James Mackenzie and Deepa Babington; Editing by Paul Taylor and
Robin Pomeroy)
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