BY GEORGE
GEORGIOPOULOS AND KAROLINA TAGARIS
ATHENS Sat Feb 21, 2015 3:13pm EST
(Reuters) -
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras declared victory on Saturday after agreeing
a conditional financial rescue deal with Europe
and despite making big concessions to avert a banking collapse within days.
With his
left-wing leadership pilloried by German conservatives, Tsipras insisted that
Friday night's last-minute agreement canceled austerity commitments and
dispensed with the "troika" - European and IMF inspectors loathed by
many Greeks.
"Yesterday
we took a decisive step, leaving austerity, the bailouts and the troika
behind," he said in a televised statement to the Greek nation. "We
won a battle, not the war. The difficulties, the real difficulties ... are
ahead of us."
After often
ill-tempered negotiations in Brussels ,
Greece secured
a four-month extension to euro zone funding, which will avert bankruptcy and a
euro exit, provided it comes up with promises of economic reforms by Monday.
Had no deal
been reached, some officials had feared panic when Greek banks reopened on
Tuesday after a long holiday weekend. But Athens
said agreement at the meeting of euro zone finance ministers should calm Greek
savers who thought capital controls might be imposed as a prelude to leaving
the euro.
A source at
the European Central Bank also ruled out restrictions on savers' right to
withdraw their deposits, aiming to dismiss expectations that - as euro zone
member Ireland put it - the Greek banking system might have gone "belly
up".
Tsipras and
his Syriza party won power last month on promises to end Greece 's EU/IMF bailout program and cooperation
with the troika - European Commission, ECB and IMF officials who have monitored
Greece 's
compliance with its austerity and reform commitments.
However, Athens has been forced to accept a conditional extension
of the bailout at the insistence of Eurogroup members led by Germany . It
must also still deal with the troika, albeit renamed in the Brussels agreement as "the three
institutions".
Finance
Minister Yanis Varoufakis said he expected Greece 's EU and IMF partners would
accept the reform promises. "We have discussed this with our
partners," he said after briefing the cabinet. "I am confident the
list of reforms will be approved."
A
government official said the pledges were on issues such as tackling tax
evasion and corruption.
In Berlin , a senior ally of
Chancellor Angela Merkel was confident the German parliament could ratify the
extension. "Greece
has finally realized that it cannot turn a blind eye to reality," Volker
Kauder, leader of Merkel's conservatives in the Bundestag, told Welt am Sonntag
newspaper.
GOING
"BELLY UP"
"Their
political problem is that this a reversal of their election position. There is
absolutely nothing on the table that could be considered a concession,"
Irish finance minister Michael Noonan said.
"They're
now compromising and compromising quite significantly," he told national
broadcaster RTE, but made clear Athens
had little choice. "The biggest threat to Greece was that their banking
system would go belly up next Wednesday."
Tsipras has
won wide support at home for what Greeks see as their leaders finally getting
tough instead of going to Brussels cap in hand
and taking orders from Berlin .
But he was also under intense pressure at home, with emergency funding
controlled by the ECB for the banks due to hit a ceiling mid-week.
About a
billion euros ($1 billion) flooded out of Greek bank accounts on Friday, a
senior banker told Reuters, due to savers' fears that the talks would fail and Athens might have to halt
such withdrawals or prepare to reintroduce its own currency.
This added
to an estimated 20 billion euros that Greeks have withdrawn since December,
when it became clear that Syriza was likely to win last month's elections.
While Ireland has already exited its bailout and is
one of Europe's fastest growing economies, Noonan said Greece now
faces another bailout on top of the two totaling 240 billion euros that it has
taken since 2010.
Friday's
deal had been "the first set of discussions to ensure Greece doesn't
collapse next week", said Noonan. "Once you get them into the safe
space for the next four months, there'll be another set of discussions which
will effectively involve the negotiation of a third program for Greece ."
Varoufakis
assured savers the country did not face ruin. "Greeks were being told that
if we were elected and we stayed in power for more than just a few days the
ATMs will cease functioning," he told reporters on Friday. "Today's
decision puts an end to this fear, to the scaremongering."
The deal
did open the possibility of lowering a target for Greece 's primary budget surplus,
which excludes debt repayments, freeing funds to ease what Tsipras calls a
"humanitarian crisis". Athens
must now negotiate a long-term deal with the euro zone before the extension
runs out in the early summer.
Some Greeks
wondered what the government had achieved. "We went through two months of
agony, emptied the banks, to realize we are still a debt colony,"
54-year-old electrician Dimitris Kanakis told Reuters. "The paymasters
call the shots."
(Additional
reporting by Padraic Halpin, Alastair Macdonald, Renee Maltezou and Jan
Stupczewski; Writing by David Stamp; Editing by Louise Ireland)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/21/us-eurozone-greece-idUSKBN0LO0O620150221
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