Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
has promised his government will submit "credible reform" proposals
to its creditors on Thursday.
Mr Tsipras was speaking during a
fractious debate on the Greek debt crisis in the European Parliament.
Greece is desperate for a third
bailout to avoid bankruptcy and possibly crashing out of the euro currency.
Meanwhile, the Greek government has
insisted that there is no threat to food and fuel supplies.
In a statement, the Ministry of
Economy, Infrastructures, Maritime Affairs and Tourism "reassures both the
Greek citizens and the visitors (tourists) that there are adequate food
supplies in the market and that their prices remain stable".
European leaders have set Thursday
as the deadline for serious reform plans from Greece in exchange for more aid.
An emergency summit involving all 28
European Union members - not just the 19 eurozone countries - will take place
on Sunday.
Greece would "file new concrete
proposals, credible reforms, for a fair and viable solution," Mr Tsipras
told MEPs.
Earlier, he urged Europe not to
succumb to "division".
Mixed
reception
The left-wing leader was greeted by
both boos and cheers as he entered the European Parliament, where he criticised
previous bailouts for turning Greece into an "austerity laboratory".
Media caption Greek Prime Minister
Alexis Tsipras was greeted with both cheers and boos as he arrived to address
the European Parliament
Mr Tsipras was speaking only days
after the Greek people decisively rejected the latest proposals from creditors
in a referendum.
The Greek people "stood up and
were counted - we have to listen to what they said."
Greece's failure to come up with new
proposals at a eurozone summit on Tuesday angered several European leaders, and
some of that frustration was reflected in the European Parliament debate.
German MEP Manfred Weber accused Mr
Tsipras of insulting other European leaders.
"The extremists of Europe are
applauding you," he said, referring to support from both left and right in
parliament.
However, some MEPs displayed placards
saying "No", praising the result of the Greek referendum.
Greek
scenarios
Greece's creditors - the European
Commission, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) - have already provided more than €200bn in two bailouts since a rescue
plan began five years ago.
Greece has meanwhile formally asked the European bailout facility - the European
Stability Mechanism - for help.
Sources say Athens is requesting a
fresh three-year loan in exchange for reforms.
In addition, the ECB's governing
council met and decided to leave its support for the banks at its current level
pending a resolution of the Greek debt crisis.
At
the scene: Hugh Schofield, BBC News, Strasbourg
Some MEPs displayed placards in
sympathy with the Greek people
When Alexis Tsipras talked, there
were plenty of MEPs who listened and liked.
Beaming left-wingers queued up
afterwards to shake his hand. The far-right saw much in his words that echoed
their own anti-Brussels agenda. For UKIP, Nigel Farage said the Greeks were a
brave people, and advised their prime minister to seize the nettle and lead
them out of the single currency.
Of course, most Euro-deputies
represent the mainstream and so took a more critical line. The conservative,
socialist and liberal groups have little trust in Mr Tsipras and his promises
for change. Like the European Commission, they sense that the Greeks are still
playing for time, with no real intention of offering concessions.
One widely held view is that Mr
Tsipras has always intended to leave the euro, but wants to get kicked out
rather than leave of his own volition. That way it's Brussels - and Berlin -
which get the blame.
In an address in Washington on Wednesday,
IMF managing director Christine Lagarde reiterated that debt restructuring
alongside a programme of reforms was the only way forward for the stricken
Greek economy.
"Greece is in a situation of
acute crisis, which needs to be addressed seriously and promptly," she
said.
Crisis
countdown
Greek pensioners have struggled to
receive payments
- Thursday 9 July: deadline for Greece to submit
proposals
- Saturday 11 July: eurozone finance ministers meet
- Sunday 12 July: all 28 members of the European Union meet
to decide Greece's fate
- Monday 20 July: €3bn payment due from Greece to the
European Central Bank
Greece's banks have been shut since
its last international bailout programme expired on June 30th and it missed an
IMF payment.
Capital controls mean people are
unable to withdraw more than €60 (£43; $66) a day from cash machines.
0 comments:
Post a Comment