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Eurogroup meeting starts with mixed reactions to Tsipras' referendum call

English.news.cn 2015-06-27 21:30:15

BELGIUM-EUROZONE-GREECE-FINANCE-MEETING 

Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem (R) greets with Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis during a Eurozone finance ministers emergency meeting on the situation in Greece in Brussels, Belgium, June 27, 2015. (Xinhua/Ye Pingfan)

BRUSSELS, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Eurozone finance ministers have begun to gather Saturday for their fifth meeting in 10 days, hours after Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras surprisingly announcing a referendum on the latest creditors' proposal.

After returned to Athens from a summit in Brussels, Tsipras announced in a television address early Saturday that his government will put the creditors' proposal to a popular vote on July 5.

The dramatic referendum call has increased uncertainty to the talks between Greece and the creditors, hiking concerns over a possible Greek default and further Grexit.

Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem said he was "negatively surprised" by the referendum call, calling it was a "sad decision" for Greece.

"It has closed the door on further talks," he said, adding the following meeting will talk about the future consequence.

Different from the Eurogroup chief's negative stance, Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), stressed on her arrival that "works must go on."

"We want to restore the financial independence and the stability of the economy in Greece," she said, noting that achieving such purpose requires financial support and debt operation from European partners.

Without commenting on the referendum, the IMF chief vowed to continue work on the Greek debt issue.

"We have always worked along those lines and make those recommends and I am going to do that here again, and we'll continue to work," Lagarde said.

Greece was reported to apply at this meeting for a short extension of the ongoing aid program to give time to the referendum. Greece rejected on Friday a proposal by creditors for a five-month extension of its bailout accompanied by some 15 billion euros (about 16.8 billion U.S. dollars) in funding.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said Greece ended the negotiations unilaterally and further negotiations over the issue failed.

"The offer is on the negotiating table and we are in the position that on Tuesday the program ends," he said, adding "None of my colleagues see any possibility for a deal now."

While Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister, looked pleased as he stepping into the meeting room in Brussels. He declined to say any words about the progress of the ongoing talks or the proposed referendum.

With only four days left to the June 30 deadline when the Greek bailout program expires and Athens needs to repay a 1.5 billion euro loan installment to the IMF, uncertainty whether a reforms for cash agreement would be finalized on time prevailed. (1 euro = 1.12 U.S. dollars)

Related:

Spotlight: PM's call for referendum on debt deal increase uncertainty for Greece, sends depositors to ATMs

ATHENS, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's dramatic call in the early hours of Saturday for a referendum on July 5 on the debt deal proposed by international lenders has increased uncertainty for Greece, analysts said.

It has also sent some depositors to line up in front of ATMs in the small hours of Saturday, as they have feared imminent capital controls as of Monday.Full Story

Greece sticks with hard stance on eve of new Eurogroup talks as default risk nears

ATHENS, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Greece stuck with the hard stance on Friday on the eve of the new Eurogroup talks which could be the last chance to reach a debt deal to avoid a default and possible Grexit in coming weeks.

At the end of a week long round of tough deliberations in Brussels with international lenders, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras returned to Athens to chair a cabinet meeting on Friday evening to decide his Leftist government's next steps.   Full story

Eurogroup to convene fifth meeting on Greece in 10 days

BRUSSELS, June 26 (Xinhua) -- The Eurogroup meeting on Greece will reconvene in Brussels on Saturday which would be the fifth in 10 days, according to an official statement issued Friday.

"The Eurogroup will reconvene in Brussels at 17.00 on 27 June 2015," the statement said. It confirmed the uncertain news that Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem have said Thursday that a meeting would "probably" reconvene on Saturday to take stock of the situation.  Full story

Deal in doubt as follow-up Eurogroup meeting on Greece kicks off

BRUSSELS, June 25 (Xinhua) -- A Eurogroup meeting on Greece kicked off on Thursday with a view to reach agreement over the details of the Greek reform plan to release financial assistance for Greece from creditors.

Austrian Federal Minister for Finance Hans Joorg Schelling told media before entering the meeting that there was no progress after negotiations between Greece and its creditors last night, but that Greek authorities handed a new proposal minutes before he arrived.  Full story

   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >>   >>|

[Editor: huaxia]
 
Eurogroup meeting starts with mixed reactions to Tsipras' referendum call
                 English.news.cn | 2015-06-27 21:30:15 | Editor: huaxia

BELGIUM-EUROZONE-GREECE-FINANCE-MEETING 

Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem (R) greets with Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis during a Eurozone finance ministers emergency meeting on the situation in Greece in Brussels, Belgium, June 27, 2015. (Xinhua/Ye Pingfan)

BRUSSELS, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Eurozone finance ministers have begun to gather Saturday for their fifth meeting in 10 days, hours after Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras surprisingly announcing a referendum on the latest creditors' proposal.

After returned to Athens from a summit in Brussels, Tsipras announced in a television address early Saturday that his government will put the creditors' proposal to a popular vote on July 5.

The dramatic referendum call has increased uncertainty to the talks between Greece and the creditors, hiking concerns over a possible Greek default and further Grexit.

Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem said he was "negatively surprised" by the referendum call, calling it was a "sad decision" for Greece.

"It has closed the door on further talks," he said, adding the following meeting will talk about the future consequence.

Different from the Eurogroup chief's negative stance, Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), stressed on her arrival that "works must go on."

"We want to restore the financial independence and the stability of the economy in Greece," she said, noting that achieving such purpose requires financial support and debt operation from European partners.

Without commenting on the referendum, the IMF chief vowed to continue work on the Greek debt issue.

"We have always worked along those lines and make those recommends and I am going to do that here again, and we'll continue to work," Lagarde said.

Greece was reported to apply at this meeting for a short extension of the ongoing aid program to give time to the referendum. Greece rejected on Friday a proposal by creditors for a five-month extension of its bailout accompanied by some 15 billion euros (about 16.8 billion U.S. dollars) in funding.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said Greece ended the negotiations unilaterally and further negotiations over the issue failed.

"The offer is on the negotiating table and we are in the position that on Tuesday the program ends," he said, adding "None of my colleagues see any possibility for a deal now."

While Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister, looked pleased as he stepping into the meeting room in Brussels. He declined to say any words about the progress of the ongoing talks or the proposed referendum.

With only four days left to the June 30 deadline when the Greek bailout program expires and Athens needs to repay a 1.5 billion euro loan installment to the IMF, uncertainty whether a reforms for cash agreement would be finalized on time prevailed. (1 euro = 1.12 U.S. dollars)

Related:

Spotlight: PM's call for referendum on debt deal increase uncertainty for Greece, sends depositors to ATMs

ATHENS, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's dramatic call in the early hours of Saturday for a referendum on July 5 on the debt deal proposed by international lenders has increased uncertainty for Greece, analysts said.

It has also sent some depositors to line up in front of ATMs in the small hours of Saturday, as they have feared imminent capital controls as of Monday.Full Story

Greece sticks with hard stance on eve of new Eurogroup talks as default risk nears

ATHENS, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Greece stuck with the hard stance on Friday on the eve of the new Eurogroup talks which could be the last chance to reach a debt deal to avoid a default and possible Grexit in coming weeks.

At the end of a week long round of tough deliberations in Brussels with international lenders, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras returned to Athens to chair a cabinet meeting on Friday evening to decide his Leftist government's next steps.   Full story

Eurogroup to convene fifth meeting on Greece in 10 days

BRUSSELS, June 26 (Xinhua) -- The Eurogroup meeting on Greece will reconvene in Brussels on Saturday which would be the fifth in 10 days, according to an official statement issued Friday.

"The Eurogroup will reconvene in Brussels at 17.00 on 27 June 2015," the statement said. It confirmed the uncertain news that Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem have said Thursday that a meeting would "probably" reconvene on Saturday to take stock of the situation.  Full story

Deal in doubt as follow-up Eurogroup meeting on Greece kicks off

BRUSSELS, June 25 (Xinhua) -- A Eurogroup meeting on Greece kicked off on Thursday with a view to reach agreement over the details of the Greek reform plan to release financial assistance for Greece from creditors.

Austrian Federal Minister for Finance Hans Joorg Schelling told media before entering the meeting that there was no progress after negotiations between Greece and its creditors last night, but that Greek authorities handed a new proposal minutes before he arrived.  Full story

   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10    >>|

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