Kathimerini English

Bill moving state assets into fund voted into law

Legislatio­n passes with 152 votes

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MPs voted late yesterday to approve a new raft of so-called prior actions, including the transfer of several state organizati­ons into the portfolio of a controvers­ial privatizat­ion fund.

The multi-bill passed with 152 votes to 141 following a tense debate in the House. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis did not address Parliament but are expected to cross swords today during a scheduled debate about education.

Earlier in the day yesterday, there had been fears that certain coalition MPs might defect from the government line on the reforms, potentiall­y putting the stability of the coalition at risk. Two SYRIZA MPs, Yiannis Tsironis and Giorgos Dimaras, expressed their intense opposition to the privatizat­ion of the country’s water boards, declaring that water should remain free. Interventi­ons by Tsipras and Fi- nance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos managed to win the two lawmakers around a few hours before the vote.

The organizati­ons that have been moved into the privatizat­ion fund’s portfolio include the Public Power Corporatio­n, the Athens and Thessaloni­ki water and sewerage companies (EYDAP and EYATH respective­ly), the Hellenic Vehicle Industry (ELBO) and Attiko Metro.

Although Tsakalotos and other government officials have insisted that the assets will be subject to lease rather than sale, legislatio­n approved earlier this year allows for the organizati­ons to be exploited in a number of ways including via their sale or lease to third parties.

In order to clinch the release of another 2.8 billion euros in rescue loans from Greece’s creditors, the government must take a number of administra­tive actions in addition to the legislatio­n approved yesterday. Those actions include appointing three members of a five-member supervisor­y board to the new fund.

A representa­tive of the European Commission yesterday confirmed that Brussels has endorsed the three officials proposed by Athens. There had been reservatio­ns expressed by officials at the Commission at the outset, particular­ly over the choice of Olga Haritou, who is a banking sector official and is married to a SYRIZA lawmaker, but those objections were eventually appeased.

Still, a few administra­tive actions remain to be undertaken by the government so it appears unlikely that tomorrow’s Euro Working Group will approve the 2.8-billioneur­o tranche. A scheduled Eurogroup meeting on October 10 is expected to give the green light for the disburseme­nt of the latest slice of funding from the country’s third bailout.

Earlier in the day, hundreds of workers gathered outside Parliament to protest the new measures in a small but vehement demonstrat­ion. Many of the protesters were from state organizati­ons that are to be transferre­d to the privatizat­ion fund, including PPC, EYDAP and EYATH.

 ??  ?? A worker shouts slogans during a protest outside the Greek Parliament in Athens yesterday. The rally was called ahead of a vote in Parliament on a series of prior actions, including the transfer of state organizati­ons into a privatizat­ion fund.
A worker shouts slogans during a protest outside the Greek Parliament in Athens yesterday. The rally was called ahead of a vote in Parliament on a series of prior actions, including the transfer of state organizati­ons into a privatizat­ion fund.

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