MaltaToday previous editions

MT 12 July 2015

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/540322

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 0 of 59

Newspaper post YOUR FIRST READ AND FIRST CLICK OF THE DAY WWW.MALTATODAY.COM.MT maltatoday SUNDAY • 12 JULY 2015 • ISSUE 818 • PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND SUNDAY ALEX VELLA GERA MATTHEW VELLA GREECE'S finance minister Euclid Tsakalotos yesterday faced the wrath of the Eurogroup's ministers, as they tore into the draconian aus- terity terms the left-wing Syriza government was now accepting, just a week since they were rejected by the Greek people in a landslide ref- erendum. It will be left up to heads of government in today's extraordinary European summit to de- cide on whether Greece is fit, trustworthy, and capable to deliver on a two-year, €12 billion savings programme of radical spending cuts and tax collection measures, in order to receive €74 billion it needs to repay its debts over the next three years. It includes €25 billion needed to recapitalise Greek banks. Tsakalotos endured hours of his counter- parts' criticism over Greece's delays in accept- ing negotiations with the Troika, and even calls to debate a possible exit from the eurozone, led by Germany, Finland, and even Slovakia. German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble – believed to be taking a more hawkish stance than Chancellor Angela Merkel – yesterday pushed to have Greece deposit €50 billion in assets in an external fund in Luxembourg, and to accept automatic spending cuts to keep to its budgetary targets. But a leaked document shows that Germany is also proposing a five-year "timeout" for Greece to leave the eurozone so that it could have its debt restructured – which is not allowed under eurozone rules – and receive some form of humanitarian aid. PAGE 3 "The older generation of Maltese writers irritate me. They're presumptuous... there's a certain self- righteousness about them that's very annoying" INTERVIEW PGS 14-15 Alexis Tsipras's political gamble backfires as Eurogroup tells Greece they don't trust it to deliver reforms for €74 billion lifeline • Germany proposes 5-year Grexit DAYS OF CENSORS PAST Greece on the edge RAPHAEL VASSALLO toasts yet another nail in the coffin of the paternalist stranglehold • 12-13 €1.40 'Good luck Euclid... you're going to need it' Greek fi nance minister Euclid Tsakalotos is greeted by IMF chief Christine Lagarde was given a rough ride by all his Eurogroup counterparts as mistrust, Germany's strong reservations, and Finland's demand for a Grexit compromised the Greeks' position further DAYS OF CENSORS PAST DAYS OF CENSORS PAST DAYS OF CENSORS PAST

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MT 12 July 2015