(Reuters) -
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said on Tuesday he was confident of an
early deal with international creditors, after shaking up his negotiating team
and sidelining his outspoken finance minister who has infuriated euro zone
partners.
Athens is
weeks away from running out of cash, and talks with EU and IMF lenders on more
aid have been deadlocked over their demands for Greece to implement reform
measures, including pension cuts and labor market liberalization.
In his
first major television interview since being elected in January, Tsipras said
he expected a deal with creditors by May 9, three days before a debt payment to
the IMF of about 750 million euros ($815.5 million) falls due. He ruled out a
default but stressed the priority was to pay wages and pensions.
Greek
financial markets and the euro rallied on Monday on hopes that the relegation
of Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, a Marxist academic prone to lecturing his
euro zone peers, would improve prospects for an early deal to avoid a default
that might lead to a Greek exit from the currency area.
Pressed on
the options if no deal were found, Tsipras ruled out snap elections but said
the government did not have the right to accept demands that fell outside the
limits of its mandate and would have to ask Greeks to decide.
"If
the solution falls outside our mandate, I will not have the right to violate
it, so the solution to which we will come to will have to be approved by the
Greek people," he told Star television in the interview.
"But I
am certain we will not reach that point. Despite the difficulties, the
possibilities to win in the negotiations are large. We should not give in to
panic moves. Whoever gets scared in this game loses."
Tsipras
said Greece was in the final stretch of negotiations despite differences on key
issues like labor reform, pension cuts and a proposed value-added tax hike on
popular tourist islands.
He said he
expected an initial deal on reforms this week or next and that asset sales
would be part of the concessions offered, including two major items - the sale
of Piraeus port and the lease of 14 regional airports.
He also
said Greece was hoping for a 3 billion to 5 billion euro pre-payment of future
profits if it struck a deal with Russia on Turkish Stream, a pipeline project.
(Πηγή: reuters.com)
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