(Reuters) - New Greek
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras will lay out his radical left-wing government's
policies in a speech later on Sunday, firmly rejecting any more austerity
forced on his debt-strapped country by its eurozone partners.
A second part of the
speech will touch on his government's social and fiscal policy over the longer
term and is likely to repeat pledges for such things as a rise in the minimum
wage and free electricity for poorer Greeks.
The speech will be
closely watched by European Union leaders who to date have shown scant
willingness to meet Tsipras's demands, fearing a wholesale backtracking on the
fiscal and economic reforms international lenders have demanded in exchange for
some 240 billion euros worth of assistance.
The current bailout
expires on Feb. 28 and most lenders want Greece to apply for an extension,
including the commitment to reforms.
Tsipras will meet EU
leaders at a summit in Brussels on Thursday. Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis
will meet euro zone counterparts the day before.
A Greek official said
EU leaders should not expect Tsipras, who rode to power on a groundswell of
anger over EU-imposed austerity that has helped to impoverish many Greeks, to
say one thing at home and another to them.
"What the prime
minister will say in parliament will be ... the same things that we will say in
Brussels," said the official, who asked not to be named. "He will be
very specific."
Over the past week,
Greek officials have laid out what they see as a transitional plan to keep
finances flowing over the next few months while they renegotiate their debt
agreement. They will first reject a 7.2 billion euro bailout tranche that has
been due pending a suspended review.
Instead, they want the
right to issue more short-term debt beyond a current 15 billion euro threshold.
They also want 1.9 billion euros in profits from Greek bonds held by the
European Central Bank and other euro zone authorities, something that was
agreed previously.
With that as a bridge,
Greek officials would then try to renegotiate payment of Greek sovereign bond
debt, perhaps by extending payments, only paying interest and getting some
respite on the budget surplus it is expected to run.
As for the
government's policy, some of which is deemed in European capitals irresponsible
or too costly, a government official suggested that not everything had to
happen at once. "The pace of the implementation of our promises is 'within
four years'," the official said.
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