Regina Leader-Post

‘Eurogeddon’ sweeps scrambling Cyprus

- RICHARD SPENCER

NICOSIA — Ever since the credit crunch turned into a Europe-wide currency crisis, the question asked has been: What would things look like when the cash dried up?

Now we know the answer: Cyprus.

Eurogeddon is sweeping the island, with the country’s leaders franticall­y scrambling to avert catastroph­e.

Unlike a Hollywood film, there is no stampede out of town. No one can afford to waste the petrol.

The motorway that traverses Cyprus — connecting Paphos in the west to Limassol and Larnaca in the east and the capital Nicosia in the north — is nearly deserted. No more than a few dozen cars lit up its entire 161-kilometre length.

To say there was no Friday afternoon bustle would be an understate­ment. Every shop on Archbishop Makarios Avenue in central Nicosia reported not a single customer all day.

“People just don’t have the money,” said Georgia, a lingerie saleswoman.

She is a living example of the spectre of financial disaster shadowing the continent. She trained as a kindergart­en teacher in her home city in Greece, but kindergart­ens have shut in its austerity drive and she lost her job, before moving to Cyprus.

Now, like most of Nicosia’s residents, she has no idea what will happen next.

“They say the banks will open on Tuesday, and this problem is only because of the banks,” she said, a rather more hopeful analysis than that of economists. “But who really knows? They have to take a decision right now, in minutes, not days.”

Cyprus lawmakers approved three key bills Friday aiming to secure a broader bailout package and stave off imminent bankruptcy.

The bills passed include a key one on restructur­ing banks, a second on restrictin­g financial transactio­ns in times of crisis, and one setting up a “solidarity fund.”

More bills to meet the total target of $7.7 billion Cdn Cyprus needs to raise to secure an internatio­nal bailout will be brought for a vote over the weekend. They include one that imposes a tax of less than one per cent on all bank deposits.

Unless the 56-member parliament can satisfy the eurozone by Monday, the financial sector in Cyprus will go bankrupt and the island will be forced out of the euro into economic collapse.

Events in recent days have left Cypriots dumbfounde­d with misery.

“I never expected this would happen,” said Despo Pambaka, a customer services manager. “They are trying to take our lives, our money. This is not the Europe that we went into. Germany showed her real face.”

Pambaka shows the intractabi­lity of Cyprus’s crisis and why Germany is so reluctant to come to its rescue.

She said she had an outstandin­g mortgage of $266,000. She is just 28, and her annual salary is $23,900.

That mismatch of income and debt is Cyprus’s problem. Her boss, Nitsa Sarka, a senior manager, who has worked for the bank for 39 years, said she had a mortgage of $305,400 despite a gross salary of just $5,300 a month.

Significan­tly, her “provident fund” — the pension and social security fund — was held as security against the mortgage.

In AJ’s, a fashionabl­e wine bar near the lingerie shops, a sole table was occupied during lunchtime. The four young women, secretarie­s, were eating “while the ship sank,” they said.

“We have to have confidence in the president in the end,” said Christiana Philippou, 28.

Maria Ioannou disagreed. “No one can save Cyprus now,” she said.

 ?? SIMON Dawson/bloomberg ?? A demonstrat­or reacts while standing behind a security cordon during a protest outside the
Cypriot parliament in Nicosia, Cyprus, on Friday.
SIMON Dawson/bloomberg A demonstrat­or reacts while standing behind a security cordon during a protest outside the Cypriot parliament in Nicosia, Cyprus, on Friday.

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