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Merkel calls for solution to keep Greece in
eurozone, report
says
German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a solution to keep Greece from
leaving the eurozone this autumn, the weekly Der Spiegel said in a report to
appear Monday.
"We must find a solution for Greece,» Merkel told her inner circle, Der
Spiegel reported without citing a source.
Merkel is said to have spoken the words before the most recent audit mission
by the debt-burdened country's so-called troika of bailout lenders: the European
Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.
Der Spiegel added that Merkel and her advisors fear that a Greek exit would
trigger a domino effect akin to what followed the 2008 collapse of US investment
bank Lehman Brothers.
A Greek exit could cost Germany 62 billion euros ($79 billion), the weekly
recalled, adding that Merkel also considers the scenario fraught with political
consequences.
It said Merkel wanted to avoid handing Athens a third rescue package, given
her doubts over being able to get it passed in the German parliament, but added
she was willing to adapt the current package by increasing the upcoming tranches
and reducing ones further down the road.
Late last month, Merkel offered Greece a ray of hope when she stressed that
she wanted the country to stay in the eurozone and pledged German help after
crisis talks with Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.
"I want to say very clearly ... that Greece is part of the eurozone and I
want Greece to remain part of the eurozone. This guides all our discussions,»
Merkel said at a joint news conference with Samaras.
On Friday, Merkel welcomed conditions attached to a new European Central Bank
bond-buying program aimed at solving the eurozone debt crisis, saying
governments also had work to do.
"The ECB made clear yesterday ... that the future of the euro will to a large
extent be determined by political action and that the conditionality is a very
important aspect,» Merkel said in Vienna.
"Responsibility and checks, or help and checks and conditions, always go hand
in hand,» she added. [AFP] |
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