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Greek austerity talks stalled ahead of key eurozone meet

09 February 2012, 09:16 CET
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Greek austerity talks stalled ahead of key eurozone meet

Evangelos Venizelos - Photo EU Council

(ATHENS) - Greek leaders Thursday fell short of striking a deal on austerity cuts, even as their finance minister headed to Brussels Thursday for crucial eurozone talks on a new bailout to avert a debt default.

Before leaving Athens, Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said he remained hopeful of winning the bailout loan from eurozone finance ministers.

"I leave for Brussels with hope that the Eurogroup will take a positive decision concerning the new aid plan," Venizelos said.

The three coalition partners in Prime Minister Lucas Papademos' government held nearly eight hours of talks overnight on a rescue plan for the debt-strapped Greek economy, said Papademos' office.

They had agreed on all "points of the plan except one", according to Papademos's office.

The sticking point was "the reduction of pensions," a government source told AFP after the marathon talks, which began Monday and broke up in the early hours of Thursday.

Government spokesman Pantelis Kapsis said they still needed to cut 600 million euros, 325 million of which would be obtained by pensions cuts.

"For the rest (275 million euros) our creditors have given us a 15-day delay to find a solution," he added.

Greece's politicians must reach a deal before their country can receive vital bailout funding from the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

The bailout is vital to prevent Greece, a eurozone member, from defaulting on 14.5 billion euros ($19.2 billion) of payments to bond holders due on March 20.

All eyes are on Greece amid fears a failure to meet its debt obligations could spark a domino effect that undermines the entire euro common currency project.

Representatives of the EU, IMF and European Central Bank, which have been organising the bailout loans for Athens, went straight into talks with Papademos after the coalition negotiations, a government source told AFP.

Greek party leaders on Wednesday received a 50-page document outlining the austerity measures demanded to trigger new loans under a 130-billion euro bailout plan agreed in October.

According to the Greek press, the measures under consideration included slashing the minimum wage by 22 percent, sweeping cuts to salaries and pensions and 15,000 public sector job losses.

Far-right leader Georgios Karatzaferis was the first to emerge from the coalition talks, denouncing the troika for heaping unreasonable pressure on the Greek government to enact more painful cuts to public spending.

"I made clear my intentions right at the start of the meeting. I cannot in one hour sign up to a plan which will affect the country for 40 or 50 years with receiving (legal) assurances that the measures are going to get the country out of its impasse," he told reporters.

According to Papademos' office "Mr Karatzaferis expressed numerous reservations," about the plan.

Conservative leader Antonis Samaras stressed that "talks will continue on the question of pensions."

"At this difficult moment, we must take care of retirees," he said.

Private creditors, who are negotiating a write-off of Greek debts worth at least 100 billion euros, are to meet on Thursday in Paris, according to a spokesman.

Greece has run up total debt of about 350 billion euros, roughly 160 percent of its gross domestic product, and the IMF has insisted that level be brought down to a maximum of 120 percent of GDP in 2020.

If the Greek parties do manage to overcome their differences, the new programme of reforms will be put before the national parliament on Friday, ahead of a vote on Sunday. In principle, the government coalition can rely on support from 255 of the 300 deputies.

The consequences of the austerity measures would be heavily felt in Greece, where many families are already feeling the pinch from earlier austerity packages.

Unions have called for protests to be held late Thursday, two days after a general strike.

The political stakes are also high as the parties prepare for early legislative elections in April.


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