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GREEK REFERENDUM

Hollande and Merkel press Greece for ‘serious’ debt plan

France and Germany told Greece on Monday to come up with serious proposals in order to restart financial aid talks, a day after Greeks voted overwhelmingly to reject more austerity.

AFP
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French President François Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the eurozone’s most powerful leaders, said that Athens must move quickly if it wants to secure a cash-for-reform deal with creditors and avoid crashing out of the single currency.

"I stress the fact that time is running out and there is urgency – urgency for Greece and urgency for Europe," Hollande said after meeting Merkel in Paris a day after Greek voters rejected bailout proposals by international lenders.

Raising the pressure on Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras before a eurozone summit on Tuesday, the European Central Bank decided to keep a tight grip on funding to Greek banks.

GREEK MEDIA ON SUMMIT

By voting decisively against tough bailout conditions, as Tsipras had urged them to do, Greeks have strengthened his negotiating hand. But the crisis remains acute, with the country’s banks already closed for more than a week to avoid a massive outflow of money that could lead to their collapse.

Only emergency support from the ECB is keeping the banks afloat and saving Greece from a chaotic euro exit that would inflict more pain on its people and gravely damage the currency, the strongest symbol of the EU’s drive for an “ever closer union” on a continent once ravaged by two world wars.

In a warning shot to the banks, the ECB raised the amount of collateral they must post for any loans. The move does not affect the lenders right away, but served as a reminder that their fate lies in its hands.

 


 

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