On 4/2/15 6:00 PM, Charlie wrote:
> No, the Syriza official specified the Christmas bonus for the poorest
> pensioners, not for all, and he ignored the demand to restore the Easter
> bonus. (In Greece as in Japan and other countries, holiday bonuses are
> an important and regularized component of wages and pensions.) This is
> Syriza's general offer to the Euro-austerity lords: let us throw out a
> small piece of "humanitarian" bread while we shrink the loaf, just not
> as quickly as you wish.
>
>

I can see the KKE denouncing Syriza whatever they do, even now:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11513341/Greece-draws-up-drachma-plans-prepares-to-miss-IMF-payment.html

Greece draws up drachma plans, prepares to miss IMF payment

'We are a Left-wing government. If we have to choose between a default 
to the IMF or a default to our own people, it is a no-brainer,' says 
senior Greek official
                
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Greece is drawing up drastic plans to nationalise the country's banking 
system and introduce a parallel currency to pay bills unless the 
eurozone takes steps to defuse the simmering crisis and soften its demands.

Sources close to the ruling Syriza party said the government is 
determined to keep public services running and pay pensions as funds run 
critically low. It may be forced to take the unprecedented step of 
missing a payment to the International Monetary Fund next week.

Greece no longer has enough money to pay the IMF €458m on April 9 and 
also to cover payments for salaries and social security on April 14, 
unless the eurozone agrees to disburse the next tranche of its interim 
bail-out deal in time.

“We are a Left-wing government. If we have to choose between a default 
to the IMF or a default to our own people, it is a no-brainer,” said a 
senior official.

“We may have to go into a silent arrears process with the IMF. This will 
cause a furore in the markets and means that the clock will start to 
tick much faster,” the source told The Telegraph.

Syriza’s radical-Left government would prefer to confine its dispute to 
EU creditors but the first payments to come due are owed to the IMF. 
While the party does not wish to trigger a formal IMF default, it 
increasingly views a slide into pre-default arrears as a necessary 
escalation in its showdown with Brussels and Frankfurt.

The view in Athens is that the EU creditor powers have yet to grasp that 
the political landscape has changed dramatically since the election of 
Syriza in January and that they will have to make real concessions if 
they wish to prevent a disastrous rupture of monetary union, an outcome 
they have ruled out repeatedly as unthinkable.

A shoe shiner tries to keep warm next to an hourglass graffiti in Athens
“They want to put us through the ritual of humiliation and force us into 
sequestration. They are trying to put us in a position where we either 
have to default to our own people or sign up to a deal that is 
politically toxic for us. If that is their objective, they will have to 
do it without us,” the source said.

Going into arrears at the IMF – even for a few days – is an extremely 
risky strategy. No developed country has ever defaulted to the Bretton 
Woods institutions. While there would be a grace period of six weeks 
before the IMF board declared Greece to be in technical default, the 
process could spin out of control at various stages.

Syriza sources say are they fully aware that a tough line with creditors 
risks setting off an unstoppable chain-reaction. They insist that they 
are willing to contemplate the worst rather than abandon their electoral 
pledges to the Greek people. An emergency fall-back plan is already in 
the works.

“We will shut down the banks and nationalise them, and then issue IOUs 
if we have to, and we all know what this means. What we will not do is 
become a protectorate of the EU,” said one source. It is well understood 
in Athens such action is tantamount to a return to the drachma, even 
though Syriza would rather reach an amicable accord within EMU.

Eurozone creditors may be willing to release enough funds to cover 
Greece’s government costs on April 14, but only if Syriza pays the IMF 
first. However, trust has already collapsed to the point where key 
ministers in Greece no longer believe the assurances from Brussels, 
fearing they may be lured into a trap. The mood has become poisonous.
“They want us to impose capital controls and cause a credit crunch, 
until the government becomes so unpopular that it falls," said one official.

"They want make an example of us, and demonstrate that no government in 
the eurozone has a right to have mind of its own. They don’t believe 
that we will walk away, or that the Greek people will back us, and they 
are wrong on both counts,” he said.
Syriza is still hoping that German Chancellor Angela Merkel can defuse 
the crisis, deeming her a “real ally”, but fear that she will be 
confronted with a fait accompli beyond even her control.

Bank of America warned that a “critical sequence of events could unfold” 
once Greece misses a payment to the IMF. It would trigger a parallel 
default to the eurozone bail-out fund (EFSF) under the legal master 
agreement, and might force the EFSF to cancel its loan packages and 
demand immediate repayment. This in turn would trigger a default on 
Greek government bonds issued under the bail-out accord.

The situation is now critical. Even if Greece manages to cobble together 
enough money to cover the April deadline, it owes the IMF a further 
€200m on May 1 and €763m on May 12. A Greek official told EMU 
counterparts at a teleconference on Wednesday that the country has run 
out of money. "There is no way we can go beyond April 9," the official 
reportedly said.

The drama comes after the creditors refused to rubber stamp Athens' 
latest bid to unlock funds, raising objections over Syriza plans to 
boost union powers in collective bargaining and boost pensions for lower 
income groups.

Creditors refused to rubber stamp Athens' latest bid to unlock funds
Brussels continues to insist on more concrete pledges, despite receiving 
a 26-page list of reforms on Wednesday. Athens hopes to raise €6.1bn in 
2015 by clamping down on fuel smuggling and tax evasion, introducing new 
levies on luxury goods, and reforming public procurement. It estimated 
funding needs at €19bn over the coming year, meaning that there will 
inevitably be fresh tensions over the summer even if there a deal on 
interim funds until June.

Former European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso warned Greece that 
they have a moral obligation to other states, describing the demands for 
more time and money as "completely unacceptable".

“We should remember that there are poorer countries that are lending 
money to Greece, so to propose a cut to their debt would be certain to 
receive a no from their partners," he said.


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