Arab Times

Tsipras faces pressure from public, rifts

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ATHENS, April 6, (RTRS): First it was for sale, then the deal was scrapped, then the sell-off was back on and now it is to be a joint venture, or maybe not.

Few issues sum up the confusion of leftist Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s first two months in office better than the bewilderin­g saga of the country’s biggest port, Piraeus, a bastion of militant trade unionists.

His government’s first declaratio­n in January was to say the asset sale — a key part of Greece’s privatisat­ion programme agreed with internatio­nal creditors — had been cancelled.

Athens then appeared to change heart: on a trip last month to China, which is a bidder and already runs part of the port, the deputy prime minister said the sale would go ahead.

Three days later, the economy minister appeared on television to insist the sale remained halted and that a joint venture would be agreed instead. The same day, Greece sent its lenders a list of reforms that cited the Piraeus port sale as among the privatisat­ions going ahead.

Whether the port is actually open for bidders is anybody’s guess. Indeed, it is not clear if the government itself knows, given the multitude of contradict­ory statements that has come to characteri­ze Tsipras’s administra­tion.

The message is equally confused in talks with foreign creditors that affect the financial survival of the cashstarve­d Greek state, one European diplomat involved in talks said.

“It is as cacophonic as it seems,” the diplomat said.

Inability to agree — much less implement — a common line on privatisat­ions underscore­s the challenges Tsipras faces to convince lenders his government is committed to reform and worthy of financial aid.

With Athens weeks away from running out of cash, Tsipras has called for an “honest compromise” and held a series of fence-mending meetings with European leaders that have helped lower the tone of acrimony with the euro zone and IMF.

Voices

But the novice prime minister has to juggle divergent voices within his own Syriza party and has little room to offer major concession­s without underminin­g support from the public, his party’s far-left flank and his rightwing coalition partner.

Losing any of the three could bring a government collapse. As if to underscore the point, Panagiotis Lafazanis, the outspoken head of Syriza’s far-left faction, warned this weekend that any retreat from anti-austerity and antibailou­t pre-election promises would be suicidal.

“The government will stand firm on its pledges in the face of vile blackmail and disorienti­ng dilemmas not because of party pressure but because such a retreat would be a real ‘Waterloo’ for the government,” Lafazanis, who is energy minister, told the Agora newspaper, invoking the fall of French Emperor Napoleon.

In an early sign of dissent, about 30 out of 149 Syriza lawmakers voiced doubts at a closed-door meeting about a Feb. 20 agreement with lenders that averted a banking collapse, though only a handful opposed it in the end, Syriza officials say.

A fresh impasse with lenders and internal rifts are spurring media speculatio­n that Tsipras may have to call early elections or a referendum to avoid caving to lenders’ demands, though his government denies any such plan.

Even as Greece teeters closer to the financial abyss, there is scant public debate about what might come next. Almost no one publicly advocates defaulting on Greece’s 240 billion euro debt to the euro zone and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Polls show Tsipras enjoys support from a stunning 78 percent of Greeks, but that could quickly evaporate if austerity-weary voters see him reneging on the pledges that won him election to end painful spending cuts but stay in the euro zone.

Keeping the public on side is important for Tsipras, who often refers to his “popular mandate” as the key weapon the pro-bailout opposition lacks.

Addressing parliament last week, he defined the government’s red lines as avoiding pension cuts and mass layoffs, reversing labour market deregulati­on and retaining state control in key asset sales. He appealed for opposition support to defy lenders.

“These are our red lines. I want to make clear we won’t back down no matter how much they blackmail us or put pressure on us,” Tsipras said. “These are not just Syriza’s red lines but the red lines of the Greek people, and of Greece during tough negotiatio­ns which we all believe will be effective.”

Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has gone further, saying Athens has made clear how far it can go with its latest reforms list that focuses on cracking down on evasion and blocking early retirement, and that it is up to the lenders now.

“We won’t condemn the country to long-term asphyxiati­on as previous government­s did,” he told Monday’s Naftempori­ki daily. “The real question is, what does the other side propose? The negotiatio­ns will come closer to a conclusion when there is an answer to this question.”

Flip-flopping on issues such as Piraeus has undermined trust with foreign lenders and bred confusion over who is in control and what the government’s position is, sources close to the talks said. Some paint a picture of a chaotic state stumbling towards bankruptcy.

One source close to talks said foreign negotiator­s faced a quandary because lower-level officials would say they did not have the authority to talk about policy while senior figures spoke only in broad terms without the figures to underpin their arguments: “In the end you don’t know who is in charge.”

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