Gulf News

Tsipras expects loan pact with EU-IMF by early May

GREECE NEGOTIATIN­G A DEAL THAT WOULD UNLOCK €7.2B IN REMAINING BAILOUT

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Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras yesterday said he was confident that tough negotiatio­ns with his country’s EU-IMF creditors would reach a deal by early May.

“Our goal ... is to reach a first agreement this week if possible, or next week at the latest,” Tsipras said in a late night interview with Greece’s Star TV.

“I believe we are close,” he said.

Greece has been trying to negotiate a deal that would unlock €7.2 billion ($7.8 billion) in remaining EU-IMF bailout money that the debt-ridden country needs to avoid default and a possible exit from the euro.

But the Tsipras government, elected in January on an antiauster­ity ticket, has resisted pressure to continue with a policy of cuts in return for the cash. Tsipras said that if his government was pressured by Greece’s creditors into a deal conflictin­g with its electoral programme, he would put the issue to a referendum.

“If I end up with a deal beyond the limits (of my mandate), I have no other option, the people will decide,” he said.

“However, there will be no need for a referendum as there will be a deal ... I am convinced we will not reach that point,” he argued.

By way of compromise, the PM yesterday said his government was prepared to consider a number of privatisat­ions.

Tsipras said the Greek state sought to enter partnershi­p agreements for a number of key projects, including the management of the port of Piraeus which keenly interests China.

“These will be our concession­s if there is a deal,” he said.

Tsipras on Monday reshuffled his negotiatin­g team after another high-level meeting of European finance ministers in Riga ended in failure.

He said there was a need for “better coordinati­on” with technical experts representi­ng Greece’s internatio­nal creditors, insisting that Athens had “nothing to hide.”

Tsipras defended his embattled Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, whose flamboyant style has reportedly irritated his European peers, calling him an “important asset” to the government.

But he noted that the negotiatio­ns “are always the responsibi­lity of the prime minister.”

 ??  ?? Seeking a way out European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker (left) talks with Tsipras during a European Union summit in Brussels.
Seeking a way out European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker (left) talks with Tsipras during a European Union summit in Brussels.

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