BY HARRY PAPACHRISTOU
ATHENS Tue Dec 17, 2013 8:00am EST
Dec 17
(Reuters) - Barely 18 months after it almost crashed out of the euro zone,
Greece takes over the rotating presidency of the European Union with the hope
of using the podium to show it is bouncing back.
Greece,
which takes on the job for six months from Jan. 1, has a reputation for being
the Europe's biggest problem child and will be negotiating for debt relief from
other European states while it holds the presidency.
The
position requires the holder to organise hundreds of ministerial gatherings and
policy negotiations, giving Athens an opportunity to drive the agenda, if only
for a few months.
Ireland won
rave reviews for running a tight ship during the first half of 2013, even while
under an EU bailout, and Denmark bolstered its standing among its peers by
efficiently steering the union through the rocky months of early 2012.
For Greece,
whose fortunes have revived somewhat since nearly going bankrupt last year, the
presidency offers an opportunity and a challenge: a chance to show the EU it is
back on track and can deliver a well-organised, slick performance, and the risk
of ever more scathing criticism if it does not.
As it
lobbies for the relief which economists say it needs if its debts are ever to
be made sustainable, the presidency offers Athens opportunity to work closely
with Germany, France and other major countries and show that it is a serious
player deserving of a break.
"Image
matters," said Panos Carvounis, head of the European Commission's office
in Athens. "The presidency will prove that Greece has a distinct and
important role to play and that it is not a country heading for
bankruptcy."
The
presidency will also give government officials from across Europe the
opportunity to visit Athens and check on Greece's progress with their own eyes,
Carvounis said.
"Two
years ago, nobody was setting foot here," he said.
"FOLD"
Some Greeks
feel their government ought to pass up the opportunity to focus on its own
problems - a six-year recession, record unemployment and rising poverty levels.
"In a
card game one can also say 'fold' ... we can't do the presidency," said
Yannis Boutaris, outspoken left-leaning mayor of Greece's second-biggest city
Thessaloniki.
Boutaris
said he was "depressed" at Greece's lack of clout in the EU.
Drawn-out
haggling between Athens and its EU and IMF lenders over its latest, protracted
bailout review - which is not expected to conclude before the start of the
presidency - have added fuel to the reformist mayor's scepticism.
One Greek
official involved in the preparations complained about Brussels officials
trying to set the agenda of meetings next year without checking with their
Greek counterparts.
"We
are constantly blackmailed over the most simple things such as setting
schedules," said deputy Parliament Speaker Yannis Tragakis.
EU
officials say the presidency diary always undergoes a large number of changes
as the demands of each of the 28 member states and officials in Brussels are
incorporated into the schedule.
Ultimately,
Athens has limited scope to use the presidency as a tool to promote its own
interests. The presidency's role as agenda-setter for EU policies has starkly
diminished since 2009, when Brussels created a new post of European Council
President held by Herman van Rompuy.
The debt
crisis, Greece's most burning problem, falls outside the remit of the
presidency because it is handled by the euro zone club of nations sharing
Europe's single currency.
NO FRILLS
BUDGET
Greece's
presidency budget will be squeezed by austerity. Athens has set aside 50
million euros ($68.9 million) to play EU host, in what it promises will be a
"Spartan" operation.
"This
is the smallest amount spent by any presidency over the past five to six
years," Deputy Foreign Minister Dimitris Kourkoulas said. Ireland spent 60
million euros on its presidency earlier this year.
EU
commissioners visiting the Greek capital on presidency business next month will
pay for their rooms out of their own budgets. All meetings are to take
place in Athens.
"There will be fewer and more austere meetings and no
junkets up-and-down the country," Carvounis said.
A Greek official heading the preparations was relieved of
his duties in October, days after he launched a tender to spend 147,600 euros
($203,100) on presidency ties and scarves.
Both Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and his anti-bailout
opposition rival, Alexis Tsipras, are hoping to capitalize on the EU presidency
as they prepare for European elections in May that are being cast as a
referendum on European austerity.
Samaras has promised to use the presidency to push for more
effective EU immigration policies, a major issue in Greece where the far-right
Golden Dawn party has grown in power.
Tsipras, who was confirmed as the European Left Party's
candidate for chief of the European Commission, is hoping the presidency will
allow him to raise his profile.
"This
is a presidency which I believe will be the swansong of the Greek tragedy but
will also signal a great, hopeful change as it ends ... since the EU elections
will take place," Tsipras said. "The message we want to send is that
austerity can be defeated in Greece and the rest of Europe."
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