Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Greek PM to visit Merkel as Spain turns screw on Athens

-

The leaders of debt-wracked Greece and economic powerhouse Germany meet in Berlin Monday after weeks of bad feeling over Athens' debt woes, bitter wartime memories and an offensive hand gesture.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will receive Greece's radical left-wing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has blamed her insistence on tough austerity for his country's "humanitarian crisis" of poverty and mass unemployment.

Spain's economy minister Luis de Guindos turned the screw on Athens another notch Sunday by insisting that it will not receive any money until it implements all its proposed reforms.

Merkel also insists that if cash-strapped Greece wants more bailout loans, of which Germany stumps up the biggest share, it must accept the bitter medicine of cuts and reforms.

Greek debt: countries most exposed
Greek debt: countries most exposed
CAM/JFS, jfs, AFP/File

Talking to the Greek newspaper Kathimerini ahead of the visit, Tsipras said the meeting with Merkel would be an opportunity to talk "without the pressure of any negotiation. It's important because we will be able to talk about topics which are damaging Europe, and about how to improve relations between our two countries."

"In this meeting two worlds will collide," said Hajo Funke, political scientist with Berlin's Free University.

"There is the political world of Greece, where a left-wing government faces a society in collapse, (of) societal decay... as grave as anything we have seen in western Europe since 1945," he told AFP.

"The other world is a content country that is dominant in Europe, Germany, which worries about maintaining its economic happiness, and which is now being asked to help the other, under conditions it doesn't fully understand."

- WWII memories -

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis arrrives on March 18  2015 at the parliament in Athens
Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis arrrives on March 18, 2015 at the parliament in Athens
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

As tensions have flared, bitter historical memories have resurfaced, with Tsipras' government reviving reparation claims for the Nazi occupation of Greece in World War II -- an issue which Berlin considers settled.

Greece's Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias appeared to offer an olive branch to Berlin on the eve of his leader's visit, telling the German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung that a Greco-German committee of experts could be set up to look into the thorny question.

When Tsipras took power in January he lost no time before laying flowers at a memorial near Athens for dozens of Greek leftists executed by the German occupation troops in 1944.

The two months since have seen a war of words escalate between Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis and Germany's Wolfgang Schaeuble, who has been caricatured in Nazi garb in a Greek newspaper.

This month the Greek embassy launched a formal complaint about disparaging comments it said Schaeuble had made about Varoufakis.

The latest flare-up was sparked by a video clip ostensibly showing Varoufakis in 2013 making the middle-finger gesture to Germany in footage he has vehemently labelled a fake.

Seeking to overcome the tensions, Merkel said last week she was looking forward to in-depth talks with Tsipras, who would be received with military honours at 1800 GMT.

European alarm that Tsipras's new hard-left government will not stick to planned austerity refo...
European alarm that Tsipras's new hard-left government will not stick to planned austerity reforms increased after the Greek parliament adopted a crisis bill aimed at helping the poor
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

"We will have some time to talk in detail, and perhaps even argue," she said last week, while quashing expectations that a solution to the Greek debt crisis would be found quickly.

She reiterated her opposition to a "Grexit" of Greece leaving the currency union, saying that "if the euro fails, Europe fails," and insisting a solution could only be reached at the European level.

To pave the way for the summit, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier will meet his Greek counterpart Nikos Kotzias in Berlin Sunday.

- 'Grexit' fears -

Greece's creditors agreed in February to extend its $240-billion euro ($255 billion) bailout by four months in exchange for promises of further reforms.

At an EU summit last week, Greece lobbied Brussels to release vital funds to help it make payments to creditors in coming days, and avoid bankruptcy and a possible exit from the euro.

The ongoing negotiations have fuelled popular opposition in Germany to the new Greek government, as many voters fear public funds are disappearing into a bottomless well.

Spanish Finance Minister Luis de Guindos (C) speaks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble ...
Spanish Finance Minister Luis de Guindos (C) speaks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on March 9, 2015 during a meeting of Eurogroup finance ministers at EU headquarters in Brussels
Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/File

Mass-circulation daily Bild last month asked readers to send in selfies holding up "Nein" (no) signs it had printed to protest against the German parliament approving emergency aid for Greece.

Some German lawmakers have openly mused about how the eurozone could survive a "Grexit" -- an outcome that more than half of Germans would welcome, according to a recent poll.

Funke said many German taxpayers have a distorted view of Greece, in which "the new government is doing whatever it wants, the Greeks are lazy... and now they're giving us the finger."

Despite such "rampant prejudice" and ill-will on both sides, said Funke, "the hope is that there can be a historical compromise, which presupposes that the partners trust each other."

The leaders of debt-wracked Greece and economic powerhouse Germany meet in Berlin Monday after weeks of bad feeling over Athens’ debt woes, bitter wartime memories and an offensive hand gesture.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will receive Greece’s radical left-wing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has blamed her insistence on tough austerity for his country’s “humanitarian crisis” of poverty and mass unemployment.

Spain’s economy minister Luis de Guindos turned the screw on Athens another notch Sunday by insisting that it will not receive any money until it implements all its proposed reforms.

Merkel also insists that if cash-strapped Greece wants more bailout loans, of which Germany stumps up the biggest share, it must accept the bitter medicine of cuts and reforms.

Greek debt: countries most exposed

Greek debt: countries most exposed
CAM/JFS, jfs, AFP/File

Talking to the Greek newspaper Kathimerini ahead of the visit, Tsipras said the meeting with Merkel would be an opportunity to talk “without the pressure of any negotiation. It’s important because we will be able to talk about topics which are damaging Europe, and about how to improve relations between our two countries.”

“In this meeting two worlds will collide,” said Hajo Funke, political scientist with Berlin’s Free University.

“There is the political world of Greece, where a left-wing government faces a society in collapse, (of) societal decay… as grave as anything we have seen in western Europe since 1945,” he told AFP.

“The other world is a content country that is dominant in Europe, Germany, which worries about maintaining its economic happiness, and which is now being asked to help the other, under conditions it doesn’t fully understand.”

– WWII memories –

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis arrrives on March 18  2015 at the parliament in Athens

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis arrrives on March 18, 2015 at the parliament in Athens
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

As tensions have flared, bitter historical memories have resurfaced, with Tsipras’ government reviving reparation claims for the Nazi occupation of Greece in World War II — an issue which Berlin considers settled.

Greece’s Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias appeared to offer an olive branch to Berlin on the eve of his leader’s visit, telling the German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung that a Greco-German committee of experts could be set up to look into the thorny question.

When Tsipras took power in January he lost no time before laying flowers at a memorial near Athens for dozens of Greek leftists executed by the German occupation troops in 1944.

The two months since have seen a war of words escalate between Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis and Germany’s Wolfgang Schaeuble, who has been caricatured in Nazi garb in a Greek newspaper.

This month the Greek embassy launched a formal complaint about disparaging comments it said Schaeuble had made about Varoufakis.

The latest flare-up was sparked by a video clip ostensibly showing Varoufakis in 2013 making the middle-finger gesture to Germany in footage he has vehemently labelled a fake.

Seeking to overcome the tensions, Merkel said last week she was looking forward to in-depth talks with Tsipras, who would be received with military honours at 1800 GMT.

European alarm that Tsipras's new hard-left government will not stick to planned austerity refo...

European alarm that Tsipras's new hard-left government will not stick to planned austerity reforms increased after the Greek parliament adopted a crisis bill aimed at helping the poor
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

“We will have some time to talk in detail, and perhaps even argue,” she said last week, while quashing expectations that a solution to the Greek debt crisis would be found quickly.

She reiterated her opposition to a “Grexit” of Greece leaving the currency union, saying that “if the euro fails, Europe fails,” and insisting a solution could only be reached at the European level.

To pave the way for the summit, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier will meet his Greek counterpart Nikos Kotzias in Berlin Sunday.

– ‘Grexit’ fears –

Greece’s creditors agreed in February to extend its $240-billion euro ($255 billion) bailout by four months in exchange for promises of further reforms.

At an EU summit last week, Greece lobbied Brussels to release vital funds to help it make payments to creditors in coming days, and avoid bankruptcy and a possible exit from the euro.

The ongoing negotiations have fuelled popular opposition in Germany to the new Greek government, as many voters fear public funds are disappearing into a bottomless well.

Spanish Finance Minister Luis de Guindos (C) speaks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble ...

Spanish Finance Minister Luis de Guindos (C) speaks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on March 9, 2015 during a meeting of Eurogroup finance ministers at EU headquarters in Brussels
Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/File

Mass-circulation daily Bild last month asked readers to send in selfies holding up “Nein” (no) signs it had printed to protest against the German parliament approving emergency aid for Greece.

Some German lawmakers have openly mused about how the eurozone could survive a “Grexit” — an outcome that more than half of Germans would welcome, according to a recent poll.

Funke said many German taxpayers have a distorted view of Greece, in which “the new government is doing whatever it wants, the Greeks are lazy… and now they’re giving us the finger.”

Despite such “rampant prejudice” and ill-will on both sides, said Funke, “the hope is that there can be a historical compromise, which presupposes that the partners trust each other.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks after signing legislation authorizing aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan at the White House on April 24, 2024...

Business

Meta's growth is due in particular to its sophisticated advertising tools and the success of "Reels" - Copyright AFP SEBASTIEN BOZONJulie JAMMOTFacebook-owner Meta on...

Business

The job losses come on the back of a huge debt restructuring deal led by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky - Copyright AFP Antonin UTZFrench...

Tech & Science

TikTok on Wednesday announced the suspension of a feature in its spinoff TikTok Lite app in France and Spain.