Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Showing posts with label european media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label european media. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Tsipras takes responsibility for ‘bad’ bailout deal, says only option

by Isabelle Roussel and Biodun Iginla, France24, Athens


Latest update : 2015-07-14

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras defended the bailout deal struck at Sunday’s eurozone summit and ruled out resigning, saying that the “bad deal” was the best available under the circumstances.

“I am fully assuming my responsibilities, for mistakes and for oversights, and for the responsibility of signing a text that I do not believe in, but that I am obliged to implement,” Tsipras told Greek public television on Tuesday.
In an hour-long interview that mixed a defence of his abrupt change of course over the bailout deal with barbs aimed at Greece’s European partners, Tsipras said he had fought a battle not to cut wages and pensions.
He added that the fiscal adjustment agreed in the deal was milder than adjustments agreed to in the past and said Greece must stick to the fiscal adjustment the deal foresees, he said. He also said that even though some countries had resisted giving Greece ‘fresh money’ – Finland and the Netherlands in particular - they relented in the end.
“To be frank, here, they are not only forced to give fresh money, but to give 82 billion, and are accepting the restructure of debt.”
The 40-year-old prime minister faces strong discontent within his Syriza party over the deal. But he said he intends to serve a full four-year term, ruling out early elections.
“The worst thing a captain can do while he is steering a ship during a storm, as difficult as it is, is to abandon the helm,” he said.
Asked when Greece’s banks would re-open, after closing more than two weeks ago when capital controls were imposed, he said: “When banks open depends on when we have the final ratification of the agreement.”
Greek protesters rail against Syriza's 'betrayal'
The European Central Bank, which has set a cap on emergency liquidity to Greek banks, would “move to gradually increase it”, allowing a gradual relaxation of capital controls, he said.
“It won’t be from one day to the next. There will be a gradual return to normality, starting with an increase in the withdrawals.”
One of the provisions of the agreement with creditors is setting aside 25 billion euros for the recapitalisation of the country’s banks.
Tsipras said he did not believe the banks required the entire amount. “Twenty five billion is more than enough. I believe banks will need 10-15 billion euros.” Having staved off financial meltdown, Tsipras has until Wednesday night to pass through parliament measures that are tougher than those Greek voters rejected in a referendum days ago. With mutiny among hard-liners in his own ranks, Tsipras will probably need the support of pro-European opposition parties to carry the vote.
“The hard truth is this one-way street for Greece was imposed on us,” Tsipras said. The lenders had sent the message that in a country under a bailout there was no point in holding elections, he said.
But he insisted that things would have been worse had there been no deal.
“A disorderly default would not only have led to a collapse of the banking system and a disappearance of all deposits, but it would force you to print a currency which would be drastically devalued because there is no reserve to support it,” he said. “A pensioner who got 800 euros would get 800 drachmas and it would only last him three days and not a month.” He said that he would do all he could to maintain the unity of his Syriza party, but his priority was to secure a deal and the stability of the economy and banking system, before dealing with party matters.
Asked if he would expel rebel party lawmakers if they vote against the bailout deal, he said expulsions not part of his party’s culture.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Pope Benedict resigns: European media stunned


Pope Benedict on 11 Feb 2013Even Vatican officials were apparently unaware of the Pope's intention to resign
European media comments on the Pope's dramatic resignation draw attention to the huge challenges that have tested his papacy, but there is also some admiration for his bold, highly unusual decision to quit.
Writing in France's centre-left Le Mondenewspaper, Stephanie Le Bars says the end of Pope Benedict's papacy is overshadowed by "machinations and plots".
"Benedict XVI seems to have been overtaken by the scale of the building sites that he himself has had to open, like it or not."
The comment piece says the Catholic Church "remains marked by a deadly centralism: the Pope and his aides get by in a universe from a bygone age".
The Pope's legacy to his successor "may prove to be weaker and more fragmented, rather than 'purified' or modernised", Le Bars writes.
'Going to the monastery'
The editor of German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, Bernd Riegert, calls the German-born Pope's move "a courageous step, a revolutionary step". "He has helped himself to freedom, he is setting boundaries. No longer will successors be able to cling on to their office."
Riegert expresses the hope that the next pope will be "more open to reforms and able to find answers to the Church's crisis in Europe and North America".
He notes that the Catholic Church is haemorrhaging members in its centuries-old strongholds, and finding it difficult to recruit new priests.
The popular German tabloid Bild splashes the headline: "Quitting! Now our Pope is going to the monastery".
The Pope's shock resignation is an "eruption of modernity" in the Vatican, according to Ezio Mauro, chief editor of Italy's La Repubblica daily.
Meanwhile, the Spanish daily El Mundo says Benedict will be remembered as "God's sweeper" - the man who tried to resolve the "numerous problems of the Church that did so much harm to its image".
In a video commentary, the chief editor of Poland's Rzeczpospolitadaily, Boguslaw Chrabota, said: "I'm shocked, just like the whole world is... For a long time we have known about his health problems, but we never knew the details, of course. We thought that he would cope, that he would overcome his illness."
A Polish scholar of the Catholic Church speculates that the Pope may have felt the modern world was passing him by. Recently the Pope launched a Twitter account to reach out to young Catholics.
Prof Wojciech Swiatkiewicz, from the University of Silesia in Katowice, told Polish public radio that Pope Benedict was living through a cultural revolution associated with rapid changes in communication.
"I do not want to say that Pope Benedict XVI did not understand this, but for him this generation is remote and it is probably better if he is succeeded by someone from the younger generation," he said.

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