DW
"If Greece explodes, Spain
and Italy will be next and
then at some point, Germany .
We therefore need to find a way within the eurozone, but this way cannot be
that the Greeks keep on having to pay," Kammenos told Bild.
Instead of
a bailout, Greece needed a
debt "haircut" like the one Germany 's creditors had to accept
in 1953, Kammenos proposed. He also argued that Berlin
should pay World War II reparations to Athens .
"All European countries have been compensated for crimes committed by Nazis,
except for Greece ,"
Kammenos said, referring to the gold Nazi soldiers brought back from Athens during the war.
The defense
minister also accused Germany
of "interfering" in its domestic affairs. His criticism was aimed at
German Finance Minister Schäuble, who earlier warned of a "Grexident"
which could push Athens
out of the euro.
"I
don't understand why he turns against Greece every day in new statements.
It's like a psychological war and Schäuble is poisoning the relationship
between the two countries through that," he said.
Talking to
Bild, Kammenos warned that his country would not take any more refugees in case
of an exit from the eurozone, potentially creating a refugee crisis at Europe 's frontiers. He also said his country was facing
severe problems after the EU and the US
imposed sanctions on Russia
following its alleged role in the Ukraine war.
European
officials meanwhile criticized Athens '
attitude. "In Greece ,
too much blame for Greece 's
problems is laid outside Greece
and Germany
is now the preferred victim," Eurogroup chief and Dutch Finance Minister
Jeroen Dijsselbloem told Dutch state television NOS. EU Commission chief Jean
Claude Juncker, however, pleaded for a breakthrough, saying he did not want a
failure and would like Europeans to stick together.
However,
Greek's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's Syriza party maintains that the EU's
previous bailouts and rescue plans have impoverished the population.
"People have not benefited from the so-called aid packages, which have
reached only the bank. People don't have any work, but prices continue to
rise," Kammenos said in his interview.
mg/ng (AFP,
Reuters)
http://www.dw.de/italy-spain-to-follow-if-greece-exits-eurozone-says-greek-defense-minister/a-18316087
No comments:
Post a Comment