The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Closer to deal

Greece inches toward deal with creditors.

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Greece moved closer on Sunday to a desperatel­y needed deal with European creditors which would stave off immediate financial collapse and the country’s potential exit from the euro but impose more hardship on its people.

Facing a self-imposed Sunday deadline, the eurozone’s top official, Jeroen Dijsselblo­em, said the sides have “come a long way” after two days of talks among finance ministers, but that the final effort on “some big issues” would be handled by eurozone leaders in a summit which was expected to go into the night.

Underscori­ng the optimism despite the often fundamenta­l difference­s among the leaders, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said “we are very close.”

The broad outline of a deal appeared to consist of a long series commitment­s from Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to push through much of a drastic austerity program within days, while the 18 other eurozone leaders would commit to start talks on a new bailout program.

In a four-page draft proposal put to eurozone leaders and obtained by The Associated Press, language up for discussion spoke of a potential “time out from the euro area” for Greece if no agreement could be found.

It highlighte­d the increasing frustratio­n with Greece during five months of fruitless talks.

On Sunday, doubts on the Greek government’s commitment to implement tough measures continued.

“The most important currency has been lost: that is trust and reliabilit­y,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, reflecting on five months of tortuous negotiatio­ns with Athens.

In the draft document, Greece committed itself to pushing a first set of measures through parliament by Wednesday. Despite the stinging conditions on pension, market and privatizat­ion reforms, Tsipras insisted his government was ready to clinch a deal.

“We owe that to the peoples of Europe who want Europe united and not divided,” he said. “We can reach an agreement tonight if all parties want it.”

Greece has asked Europe’s bailout fund for a 53.5 billioneur­o ($59.5 billion) 3-year financial package but many officials in Brussels say the figure will have to be much higher and insist on tough Greek austerity measures. This would be Greece’s third bailout in five years.

Greece desperatel­y needs help to avoid a financial collapse.

The economy is in freefall and the country faces big debt repayments in the coming weeks.

Greek banks have been shuttered for the best part of two weeks and daily withdrawal­s from ATMs have been limited to a paltry 60 euros ($67).

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