Greek PM warns Merkel of 'impossible' debt obligation: FT
 2 hours ago     
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. View photoGreece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras addresses a news conference 
during a European Union leaders …                                               
       (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras warned German Chancellor 
Angela Merkel that it will be "impossible" for his country to service debt 
obligations due in coming weeks if the European Union does not give his country 
any short-term financial assistance, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. 
The warning was sent to Merkel in a letter dated March 15 and came just before 
she agreed to meet Tsipras on the sidelines of an EU summit last Thursday, the 
newspaper said. (http://on.ft.com/1G0EkJy) In the letter, Tsipras warned that 
his government would be forced to choose between paying off loans, owed 
primarily to the International Monetary Fund, or to continue social spending. 
He blamed European Central Bank limits on Greece's ability to issue short-term 
debt as well as eurozone bailout authorities' refusal to disburse any aid 
before Athens adopts a new round of economic reforms, the paper said. 
Representatives at Tsipras's and Merkel's office were not immediately available 
for comment. "It ought to be clear that the ECB's special restrictions when 
combined with disbursement delays would make it impossible for any government 
to service its debt," Tsipras wrote. The Greek PM said his country was 
committed to fulfilling its obligations in good faith and to close co-operation 
with its partners. But he also warned Merkel that failure to find short-term 
funding could lead to much bigger problems, the newspaper said. Tsipras said 
servicing the debts would lead to a sharp deterioration in Greece's already 
depressed social economy, "a prospect that I will not countenance."  Merkel and 
Tsipras have sought to play down the drama of the Greek leader's first official 
visit to Berlin on Monday, but open skepticism among the chancellor's allies 
has spawned media portrayals of a Western-style showdown. Although Merkel 
acknowledged last week that she and Tsipras would talk "and perhaps also 
argue," she said it would not be a defining moment in the standoff between 
Athens and its euro zone creditors over the terms of its 240 billion-euro 
bailout deals. (Reporting by Shivam Srivastava in Bengaluru; Editing by 
Jonathan Oatis)

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