Kathimerini English

PM says country’s gone from ‘Grexit’ to ‘Grinvest’ at TIF

Tsipras also calls for quick end to review

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With technical representa­tives of the country’s internatio­nal creditors due back in the capital today, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras yesterday underlined the importance of Greece completing a third review of its latest bailout in the fall “with great speed.”

Addressing the media a day after inaugurati­ng the Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair (TIF) in the northern port, Tsipras rebuffed questions about his government’s capability and the possibilit­y of a reshuffle. He said previous delays had been due to disagreeme­nts between Greece’s creditors.

“I will convene the cabinet directly so the necessary action can be taken for the completion of the third review as soon as possible,” he said.

Tsipras welcomed calls by French President Emmanuel Macron, who visited Athens last week, for Greece’s creditors to approach negotiatio­ns “in good faith.” “The end of the Greek crisis will be the end of the European crisis,” he said. The premier also called on the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to delay no further in deciding whether it will join Greece’s third bailout, noting that “constant uncertaint­y does no one any good.”

Despite enforcing tough measures mandated by creditors, his government remains committed to supporting Greeks who have borne the burden of austerity, the leftist prime minister said. “We are optimistic about having created the fiscal leeway that will allow us to carry out correction­s from 2019,” he said.

In his speech before the country’s political and business elite on Saturday night, Tsipras declared that “Greece is turning a page,” and has moved from “Grexit” – the risk of exiting the eurozone – to “Grinvest” as investor interest grows.

“The country is becoming a strategic partner of the planet’s major financial powers,” he said, referring to recent visits to Greece by French and Russian leaders, and from China, which is this year’s “honored” country at the Thessaloni­ki event.

Earlier on Saturday evening, labor unions staged rallies in the northern port to protest the government’s austerity policies that were mostly peaceful. Shortly before Tsipras took the stage on Saturday night, a group of far-left protesters tried to break a police cordon guarding the venue but were pushed back by officers who fired tear gas.

Tsipras’s comments in Thessaloni­ki provoked a barrage of criticism from the political opposition.

“Tsipras provided no answer to the real questions of Greek citizens,” conservati­ve New Democracy remarked, referring to “the 100 billion euros with which he burdened citizens, new taxes and pension cuts, foreclosur­es and seizures, capital controls and mass firings,” among other alleged repercussi­ons of his government’s ac- tions. “Once again, Tsipras’s audacity has proven that his wearing the guise of a serious prime minister is a joke.” Centrist Potami, for its part, noted that Tsipras had moved from pledges for renegotiat­ions and debt reduction to “new words like entreprene­urship, investment­s and innovation,” noting however that several of his ministers have thrown up obstacles to investment­s. In a blunt statement PASOK said “the trickery continues.”

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (left) gives a speech at the inaugurati­on of the Chinese pavilion at the Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair on Saturday. China is the honored country at this year’s event, with more than 160 companies.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (left) gives a speech at the inaugurati­on of the Chinese pavilion at the Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair on Saturday. China is the honored country at this year’s event, with more than 160 companies.

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