Greece, resigned, awaits the verdict of the European
A new episode is crucial for Greece plays Monday in Brussels. Finance ministers of the euro area must agree on the second bailout, 130 billion euros. They must also erase the floor on 50% of the debt with private creditors, or 100 billion euros. Crunch time for Athens to meet March 20 to maturity of debt of 14.5 billion.
Representatives of the ECB and finance ministries have called yesterday to advance to the final details. But many European leaders showed their confidence in recent days. Just yesterday, the Austrian finance minister, Maria Fekter, was upbeat about a deal: "For now, we will exactly in that direction." Even if it recognizes that "there will be intense negotiations on control mechanisms. "
For its part, the Greek government keeps its commitments: Saturday it approved the final plan for additional savings, amounting to 325 million euros (cuts in pensions, lowering the minimum wage), claimed by the Troika EU-ECB-IMF in exchange for the release of funds.
With the deadline approached, the Greeks were again called upon to take to the streets yesterday. But austerity exhausted, they no longer have the heart to manifest. The depredations committed a week earlier in the center of Athens in small groups of anarchists-as the burning of a listed building of the nineteenth century, gave a very bad image of the country. And while some still hoped to then change the course of things, the adoption by government austerity measures makes them feel that much is now played.
Attachment to the euro
Under a blazing sun, only three thousand trade unionists from the private and public had traveled to Parliament, meeting under a banner that proclaimed, in Greek: "The policies we require an effort of national unity but there nation has more than when there is more that of the hungry and destitute! "In the crowd, another banner proclaimed in English:" We are all Greeks, Merkel and Sarkozy are freaks! "(" We are all Greeks, Merkel and Sarkozy are crazy! ").
But the protesters do not represent the whole of Greece. Walking through the rural areas of the Peloponnese, we see that the population has resigned itself to the efforts required by the troika of countries. "People here realize that Euroscepticism is leading nowhere and that the output of the euro would be a disaster for everyone," says Le Figaro Petros Tatoulis, the elected president of the region, who gave up any political affiliation. "It is for us now to invent a new model of development and export our fine Mediterranean products under the brand name of the Peloponnese, which is received worldwide as a premium brand." ….. …
A survey shows that 73% of Greeks are in favor of maintaining in the euro area, although only 49% of them believe the country will succeed in the next two years.
The problem now is what political leadership is responsible for the implementation of austerity measures. Elections are scheduled for April. But according to another survey, the two major parties of former coalition government today (PASOK and New Democracy) would collect a total of only a quarter of the votes, the lion's share going to the extreme left. But leaders of the latter have been careful to make any commitments in writing in respect of the troika.
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