Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Opposed to privatizat­ion, Greek says

- ELENA BECATOROS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATHENS, Greece — Greece’s new government is “radically opposed” to the privatizat­ion of certain businesses, particular­ly in the energy and infrastruc­ture sectors, a senior cabinet minister said Wednesday as talks with creditors were set to begin.

Selling state-owned enterprise­s is one of the actions Greece has been asked to take to raise funds and reduce debt in exchange for rescue loans from the eurozone and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Talks between Greece and its creditors began on a technical level in Brussels on Wednesday to cement a series of measures Athens must implement to get the remaining bailout funds and avoid bankruptcy.

“We are radically opposed to the privatizat­ion, particular­ly of the strategic sectors and businesses of our economy, and primarily in the sector of infrastruc­ture and energy,” said Panagiotis Lafazanis, the energy and environmen­t minister and a government hard-liner, at a conference in Athens.

Lafazanis added that “honestly, I haven’t understood why for some schools of thought, privatizat­ions have become synonymous with reforms.”

He argued that what he called the “neoliberal deregulati­on in the energy market, which occurred particular­ly during the recent [bailout] years with the insistence of the [European] Commission and the troika,” had prolonged and exacerbate­d Greece’s financial crisis and energy poverty in the country.

“Troika” refers to the commission, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and European Central Bank, which together oversee the billions of dollars in rescue loans Greece began receiving in 2010.

The word “troika” got a bad name in Greece after mid-level officials from those institutio­ns began to visit Greece to carry out debt inspection­s. The new government has refused to deal with those officials, saying they are not welcome in Greece. On Wednesday, it said the team of lower-level technical experts with whom Greek officials would be negotiatin­g would now be known as the “Brussels Group.”

Greece’s new radical left government, voted in on Jan. 25 on promises to abolish budget austerity measures, has pledged not to take any unilateral action without consulting its European creditors and those overseeing the country’s bailout, and to adhere to a series of policy changes.

It made the pledges in February in return for a four-month extension of the European part of its bailout, which was to have expired at the end of February.

But some ministers and party members have insisted the governing Syriza party’s pre-election promises must be adhered to.

Lafazanis has frequently repeated his opposition to privatizat­ions. Last month, he said the privatizat­ion of the country’s power grid and power utility, DEH, would be halted as final binding bids had not yet been submitted.

In his speech Wednesday, Lafazanis said his country wanted diverse energy sources but would not be dependent on “any large power and of any coalition of countries.”

“Greece is too small a country to remain a type of dependent ‘troikan’ economic protectora­te … with the status of an energy banana republic,” he said.

 ?? AP/GIANNIS PAPANIKOS ?? A woman passes a mural on a building in the northern Greek city of Thessaloni­ki on Wednesday. Talks between Greece and its creditors about European bailout loans began Wednesday in Brussels.
AP/GIANNIS PAPANIKOS A woman passes a mural on a building in the northern Greek city of Thessaloni­ki on Wednesday. Talks between Greece and its creditors about European bailout loans began Wednesday in Brussels.

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