ATHENS Mon Dec 2, 2013 8:01pm IST
(Reuters) -
Greece 's
deputy prime minister accused its lenders of Monday of obstructing bailout
talks after inspectors from the EU and IMF postponed a visit over a lack of
progress on reforms.
The troika
of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International
Monetary Fund have been pushing Greece
to accept measures that do nothing to fix the country's finances, said
Evangelos Venizelos, also head of the left-wing PASOK party, a junior partner
in the coalition government.
"Nothing
justifies a new round of friction, foot-dragging and tension with the troika.
Nothing," Venizelos said in a speech at a conference.
The
troika's latest review of Greece's performance under its second bailout has
dragged on since September and been interrupted twice as the two sides tangle
over the size of a potential budget gap next year and the pace of reforms.
The
lenders, who have long criticized Athens for failing
to make good on promises to reform, have argued that unless it finds new
savings, Greece
will miss its surplus target for next year by about 2 billion euros. Athens says the
difference has since been narrowed to about 1 billion.
The lenders
have also demanded that Greece
ease restrictions on bank foreclosures and on private companies carrying out
mass layoffs - something that Venizelos denounced as provocative to Greek
society.
"We
don't want unjustified provocations which test what society, the economy and
our democracy can take," Venizelos said. "We want reliable,
intelligent interlocutors without bureaucratic rigidity," he added.
Venizelos's
once-dominant Socialist party lost about 80 percent of its voters after
agreeing to the EU/IMF bailout in 2010, when it was in power alone. The party
is now under pressure to resurrect itself or be wiped out.
Venizelos
said Greece
was meeting all its key targets. "We want real, not just a rhetorical,
recognition of the sacrifices of Greek people," he said.
Prime
Minister Antonis Samaras said last week he wanted a deal with the troika by the
end of the year.
"I
think these outstanding issues will be overcome," said Marko Mrsnik,
director of sovereign ratings at Standard & Poor's, speaking at the same
conference.
(Reporting
by Harry Papachristou, editing by Deepa Babington and Mark Heinrich)
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