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Merkel calls in Draghi and Lagarde for Greek debt talks EU leaders stage late-night mini-summit to try to defuse Greek crisis
(about 1 hour later)
Related: Greece's creditors hold emergency meeting as endgame looms - live updates The German chancellor Angela Merkel moved to try to defuse Greece’s financial and European crisis late on Monday, converting a routine long-scheduled meeting with French and EU leaders into a mini-summit on Greece.
The German chancellor Angela Merkel moved to try to defuse Greece’s financial and European crisis late on Monday, converting a routine long-scheduled meeting with French and EU leaders into a mini-summit on Greece that was said to be preparing a final response to Athens’ intractable debt dilemmas.
Merkel met France’s president François Hollande and the president of the European commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, for what was billed as a session on how to boost investment in the EU. But they were joined by Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, and Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, in what turned into a late-night session on Greece.Merkel met France’s president François Hollande and the president of the European commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, for what was billed as a session on how to boost investment in the EU. But they were joined by Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, and Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, in what turned into a late-night session on Greece.
Athens is facing insolvency and payments of €1.6bn (£1.1bn) to the IMF within the next few weeks, with the first payment of €300m due by Friday. Now it appears that the Greek drama is shifting up a gear, heading for its denouement, after five months of negotiations between the Greeks and its eurozone/IMF creditors going nowhere. Athens is facing insolvency and payments of €1.6bn (£1.1bn) to the IMF within the next few weeks, with the first payment of €300m due by Friday. Now it appears that the Greek drama is shifting up a gear, heading for its denouement, after five months of negotiations between Greece and its eurozone/IMF creditors going nowhere.
Related: Greece's creditors hold emergency meeting as endgame looms - live updates
Merkel’s staff let it be known that the chancellor wanted the mini-summit in Berlin to deliver a “final offer” to Athens, German public television reported. “The creditors want to agree a common position tonight,” ZDF television said. Merkel wanted the deal sealed before a meeting this weekend in Germany of the G7 countries. Whether the terms of the proposed resolution represented an ultimatum to Greece was unclear.Merkel’s staff let it be known that the chancellor wanted the mini-summit in Berlin to deliver a “final offer” to Athens, German public television reported. “The creditors want to agree a common position tonight,” ZDF television said. Merkel wanted the deal sealed before a meeting this weekend in Germany of the G7 countries. Whether the terms of the proposed resolution represented an ultimatum to Greece was unclear.
The meeting began in Berlin at 9.30pm local time and was expected to last until the early hours of Tuesday. Die Welt newspaper quoted German government officials as saying: “The endgame is beginning. The meeting is aimed at making the Greeks a final offer.” The meeting began in Berlin at 9.30pm local time and lasted until around midnight. Die Welt newspaper quoted German government officials as saying: “The endgame is beginning. The meeting is aimed at making the Greeks a final offer.”
Both sides remain far apart on key sticking points of the bailout terms, with the eurozone and the IMF insisting on liberalising pledges on labour markets, collective wage bargaining, pension systems and privatisation from the Greeks in return for releasing a final €7.2bn in bailout funds that would tide Greece over for most of the summer. It would then pave the way for further negotiations on a third rescue package for Greece which might involve a writedown of the country’s unsustainable debt. However, after the end of talks a German spokesman said the leaders had agreed “that work must continue with real intensity”. He added: “The participants in the talks were in close contact in recent days and want this to remain the case in the coming days both among themselves and of course with the Greek government.”
Both sides remain far apart on key sticking points of the bailout terms, with the eurozone and the IMF insisting on liberalising pledges on labour markets, collective wage bargaining, pension systems and privatisation from the Greeks in return for releasing a final €7.2bn in bailout funds that would tide Greece over for most of the summer. It would then pave the way for further negotiations on a third rescue package for Greece, which might involve a writedown of the country’s unsustainable debt.
While it remained unclear what, if anything, the Berlin session would offer Greece, the very fact of its taking place represented a victory of sorts for Alexis Tsipras, the leftwing Greek prime minister elected in January with a mandate to overthrow five years of eurozone – and German-dictated – austerity.While it remained unclear what, if anything, the Berlin session would offer Greece, the very fact of its taking place represented a victory of sorts for Alexis Tsipras, the leftwing Greek prime minister elected in January with a mandate to overthrow five years of eurozone – and German-dictated – austerity.
In a lengthy broadside published at the weekend in Le Monde, Tsipras denounced the eurozone for making “absurd” demands on Greece, predicted that the creditor governments’ demands of Athens would lead to the break up of the EU, would destroy democracy in Europe and render elections in countries being bailed out pointless.In a lengthy broadside published at the weekend in Le Monde, Tsipras denounced the eurozone for making “absurd” demands on Greece, predicted that the creditor governments’ demands of Athens would lead to the break up of the EU, would destroy democracy in Europe and render elections in countries being bailed out pointless.
The tirade by Tsipras came despite daily pronouncements from Athens that Greece and the eurozone were on the brink of a settlement. But Tsipras insisted that the crisis had moved beyond the level of financial and technocratic negotiations and would need to be resolved at the level of EU political leaders. Monday night’s session of eurozone and IMF leaders appeared to vindicate that position.The tirade by Tsipras came despite daily pronouncements from Athens that Greece and the eurozone were on the brink of a settlement. But Tsipras insisted that the crisis had moved beyond the level of financial and technocratic negotiations and would need to be resolved at the level of EU political leaders. Monday night’s session of eurozone and IMF leaders appeared to vindicate that position.
The Greek prime minister’s bold move at the weekend appeared to be aimed at forcing Merkel to make up her mind over whether or not she was prepared to see Greece crash out of the single currency zone. Both sides appeared to be locked in an escalating exercise in brinkmanship that would need to be resolved one way or another by national leaders.The Greek prime minister’s bold move at the weekend appeared to be aimed at forcing Merkel to make up her mind over whether or not she was prepared to see Greece crash out of the single currency zone. Both sides appeared to be locked in an escalating exercise in brinkmanship that would need to be resolved one way or another by national leaders.