Greece's
finance minister says his country's financial situation is "terribly
urgent" and the crisis could come to a head in a couple of weeks.
Ministers
said Greece had made "progress" but more work was needed. The Greek
government is struggling to meet its payment obligations.
Earlier,
Greece began the transfer of €750m (£544m, $834m) in debt interest to the
International Monetary Fund - a day ahead of a payment deadline.
"The
liquidity issue is a terribly urgent issue. It's common knowledge, let's not
beat around the bush," Mr Varoufakis told reporters in Brussels. "From
the perspective [of timing], we are talking about the next couple of
weeks."
Greece has
until the end of June to reach a reform deal with its international creditors.
Its finances are running so low that it has had to ask public bodies for help.
The crisis
has raised the prospect that Greece might default on its debts and leave the
euro.
The
eurozone is insisting on a rigorous regime of reforms, including cuts to
pensions, in return for the bailout, but Greece's anti-austerity Syriza-led
government is resisting the tough terms.
In a
statement, the eurozone finance ministers said they "welcomed the progress
that has been achieved so far" in the negotiations, but added: "We acknowledged
that more time and effort are needed to bridge the gaps on the remaining open
issues."
Eurogroup
chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem said there had to be a full deal on the bailout
before Greece received any further payments.
"There
are time constraints and liquidity constraints and hopefully we will reach an
agreement before time runs out and before money runs out," he said.
There had
been fears that Greece would default on its IMF debt repayment due on Tuesday.
Referendum
However, a
Greek finance ministry official was quoted as saying that the order for
repayment had been executed on Monday. Almost €1bn has been handed over to the
IMF in interest payments since the start of May.
It is
unclear how the government came up with the funds, but the mayor of Greece's
second city Thessaloniki revealed last week that he had handed over cash
reserves in response to an appeal for money.
Syriza has
said it will not break its anti-austerity electoral promises, and that has
raised the prospect of a referendum on any deal agreed in Brussels.
Germany's
finance minister, Wolfgang Schaueble, has lent support to the idea. "Maybe
this would be the right measure to let the Greek people decide if it is ready
to accept what is necessary," he said.
(Πηγή: bbc.com)
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