(Reuters) -
Greece and its lenders must reach a reform deal by early May to address
Greece's need for cash, Deputy Prime Minister Yannis Dragasakis said in an
interview with a Greek newspaper published on Saturday.
Athens must
pay the International Monetary Fund almost 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) in
May. It has said it wants to honor its obligations and needs lenders to offer
something in return.
"There
is clearly a potential and an imperative need for an interim deal to be
concluded in the first days of May, if not within April," Dragasakis said
in an interview with Avgi newspaper, the mouthpiece of the leftist government
of Alexis Tsipras.
"We
are mainly requesting that the current liquidity problem be recognized as a
problem of common responsibility and that it be jointly addressed", he
said. "Otherwise, the country's ability to smoothly service its external obligations
would be in an ever growing contrast to Greek people's survival."
Greek
lawmakers approved a decree late on Friday to force state entities to lend cash
to the central government in spite of protests by municipalities and labor
unions.
The protests
added to pressure on Tsipras, whose decision to battle lenders has become
increasingly unpopular. According to a Kappa Research poll published in To Vima
newspaper on Saturday, 72 percent of respondents said the country must strike a
deal with its creditors versus 23 percent who were in favor of a clash.
Tensions
with lenders and slow progress have prompted speculation that the government
may be forced to call a snap election or a referendum if Greece fails to reach
agreement with its lenders. But the government has ruled out such an option for
now.
Asked by
Kappa what the best options for Athens were in case of an impasse, 44 percent
of Greeks wanted the government to handle the issue without seeking any kind of
a fresh popular mandate. About 33 percent were in favor of a referendum, while
19 percent wanted a snap election.
Another
poll by Alco for Proto Thema newspaper showed that 63 of those polled were
concerned about a Greek default versus 32 percent who were not.
(Πηγή:
reuters.com)
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