Malta Independent

Greece’s leftist leaders reject call to miss debt payment

- Demetris Nellas

Greece will continue paying its debts, after its ruling Radical Left Coalition narrowly rejected a call by party hardliners to miss its next Internatio­nal Monetary Fund loan payment.

Syriza’s central committee rejected the proposal Sunday by far left hardliners 95-75, with one blank vote. It also rejected calls to nationaliz­e banks and hold a referendum that would give voters the power to reject any deal in Brussels with the EU and IMF over relief in exchange for more fiscal reforms.

This was just the latest push in Greece to miss an IMF payment. Last week, Nikos Filis, the leader of the party’s parliament­ary group, said Greece’s cash crunch is so tight that it might not be able to make a June 5 payment of €300 million.

Greece owes a total of €1.56 billion in June. It has not received bailout aid since August and the European Central Bank has provided less help lately to Greek banks.

Party hardliners known as the Left Platform invoke non-payment as a matter of principle. Most Syriza officials, however, use the threat as a means to pressure lenders to provide immediate relief.

The party instead approved a text which claims the government will not sign a deal based on previous bailout agreements and rejects “ultimatums” by “the austerity fanatics.” Still, Syriza believes a “mutually advantageo­us” deal can emerge.

Earlier Sunday, Left Platform leader Panayiotis Lafazanis, a cabinet minister overseeing energy, the environmen­t and agricultur­e, declared that “it would not be a catastroph­e to exit the euro (nor) a terrorist act not to pay the next installmen­t to the IMF.”

Lafazanis dismissed Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ view that progress has been achieved in ne- gotiations with lenders and said Greece has never been under such “harsh blackmail.” He said lenders want to “annihilate” Greece.

Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis, a senior Syriza member who doesn’t belong to the Left Platform, said in a TV interview Sunday that Greece can’t pay the IMF installmen­ts.

 ??  ?? Nikos Voutsis
Nikos Voutsis

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