European Union | 26.04.2010
Merkel tightens the thumb screws on Greece
Speaking to journalists in Berlin on Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was resolute in her assessment of the Greek debt crisis, and said Greece must accept tough austerity measures over a period of years to ensure the stability of the euro.
"A program must be agreed on between the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Greece" before any concrete financial aid can be offered by the European Union, Merkel said.
Deftly sidestepping the words "bailout" or "default", Merkel did, however, emphasize that (EU) government guarantees were "indispensable" to ensure that a Greek austerity program effectively tackled the country's massive deficit.
Euro exit 'not an option' for Greece
The German chancellor said it was up to Greece to convince the world that it had a "credible" debt-reduction plan and that Germany was prepared when that became evident.
She said she had "confidence" in the negotiations Greece was conducting with the IMF and the European Union. She stressed that expelling Greece from the euro currency zone was "not an option", warning that such talk only fueled uncertainty in the marketplace.
"What we need is a quick reaction for the stability of the eurozone as a whole and everything that takes us away from this central goal is, at the moment, not an option. We do not need uncertainty, but certainty," Merkel said.
The chancellor predicted that it would be only a "matter of days" before a rescue package for Greece was nailed down.
gb/dpa/AFP/AP/Reuters
Editor: Susan Houlton/dw
εχασε την εμπιστοσύνη των νεοελλήνων και εχει δίκηο να είναι διστακτική στην κρίση της.
ReplyDelete