EU leaders say Greece
has agreed to come up with a new reform plan within days to secure the
additional bailout funds required to prevent bankruptcy.
Mr Tsipras said he was
now "more optimistic" after the meeting. Separately, the EU leaders
agreed to keep sanctions on Russia in place until the end of this year at the
earliest.
The sanctions, imposed
because of Russia's alleged military intervention in Ukraine, are now linked to
"complete implementation" of a ceasefire deal.
The
middle-of-the-night talks between Mr Tsipras, Ms Merkel, French President
Francois Hollande and leaders of the EU institutions lasted for more than three
hours. They were organised on the sidelines of an EU summit in the Belgian
capital.
Speaking afterwards,
Ms Merkel said: "The Greek government will take full responsibility for
the reforms and submit a list of these reforms... in the coming days."
Describing the meeting
as "good and constructive", she warned that "everything is
supposed to be completed quickly and everyone needs to do his or her bit".
Mr Tsipras said:
"I'm more optimistic after this deliberation. I think that all the sides
confirmed their intention to try to do their best to overcome the difficulties
of the Greek economy as soon as possible."
The BBC's Damian
Grammaticus in Brussels reports a senior EU official as saying that the message
to Greece was simple - "give us a list fast, then you can get the money
fast".
But our correspondent
adds that only once that list of reforms is evaluated for its impact on
Greece's finances - and approved - will the other nations that use the euro
hand over more money.
The current assumption
is that Greece has only enough cash to meet all its obligations until sometime
next month.
International
creditors have suggested they are ready to extend help on Greece's €240bn
(£176bn; $272bn) bailout until the end of June.
But Mr Tsipras's
earlier reform plans had met resistance from EU leaders, with Germany among the
most critical.
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