Greece is
to hold a referendum on whether to accept austerity measures described as “unbearable”
by the country’s Prime Minister.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel had earlier said the deal to extend the bailout by
five months was “very generous”.
However Mr
Tsipras, who was elected in January on an anti-austerity platform, described
the terms as “blackmail” and “unbearable”.
He added
the referendum was being held “for us, for future generations, for the history
of the Greeks, for the sovereignty and dignity of our people”.
Greece has
seen its GDP fall by about 25 per cent, while unemployed soared to 25 per cent
– or 50 per cent among young people. Suicide rates and homelessness have also
increased.
The
country’s development minister, Panayiotis Lafazanis, urged Greeks to reject
the bailout deal and predicted they would answer “with a resounding no” in the
referendum.
The hated
Troika insists austerity policies are necessary if Greece’s vast debts - it
received bailouts worth a total of €240bn (£170bn) - are to be repaid. And
Athens’ request for debt relief appears to have fallen on deaf ears, despite a
warning in a Financial Times editorial earlier this year that servicing such a
large debt would “require Greece to operate as a quasi-slave economy”
But without
the continuation of loans from the Troika, the Government will default on its
existing debts and Greece will almost certainly be forced out of the euro.
Athens is due to repay just over £1bn to the IMF on 30 June.
If Greece
agrees to the austerity package, the creditors would unfreeze £5.1bn in bailout
money that would resolve the country's most immediate financial woes.
However
Konstantinos Chrysogonos, a Syriza MEP, told BBC 2's Newsnight that the terms
of the deal did not square with the promises that saw Syriza elected to power.
“It's
obvious that the deal that creditors are proposing to the Greek government is
beyond the popular mandate this government has,” he said.
“There was
probably no other way but to submit the demands of the creditors to a
referendum.”
Mr
Chrysogonos said it was not clear yet what recommendation the government would
make in the run up to the vote.
“I don't
know what the suggestion of the government will be, whether it will be to
accept or to withdraw or to refuse the demands of the creditors,” he added. “This
remains to be seen. It remains to be seen what the verdict of the Greek people
will be.”
Πηγή:
independent.co.uk

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