- Title: EUROZONE-GREECE/VAROUFAKIS PROFILE Greek Finance Minister Varoufakis resigns
- Date: 8th July 2015
- Summary: ATHENS, GREECE (FILE) (REUTERS) ***WARNING CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY*** VARIOUS OF MEDIA VAROUFAKIS WALKING VARIOUS OF VAROUFAKIS WALKING SURROUNDED BY MEDIA VAROUFAKIS WALKING ALONG AN ATHENS SQUARE WITH INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC AFFAIRS MINISTER, EUCLID TSAKALOTOS, FOLLOWED BY JOURNALISTS
- Embargoed: 23rd July 2015 13:00
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- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA4FI1NCNVKYTWWHTUPD66HF1XX
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Greece's outspoken finance minister resigned on Monday (July 6), removing a major obstacle to any last-minute deal to keep Athens in the eurozone after Greeks voted resoundingly to reject the austerity terms of a bailout.
Yanis Varoufakis, a self-proclaimed "erratic Marxist" economist who infuriated eurozone partners with his unconventional style and hectoring lectures, had campaigned for Sunday's (July 5) sweeping 'No' vote, accusing Greece' creditors of "terrorism".
"I was made aware of a certain 'preference' by some Eurogroup participants, and assorted 'partners', for my... 'absence' from its meetings; an idea that the Prime Minister judged to be potentially helpful to him in reaching an agreement," Varoufakis said in a statement.
His sacrifice, after promising Greeks he would win a better deal within a day of their overwhelming referendum vote, suggested leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is determined to try to reach a last-ditch compromise with European leaders.
With banks shuttered, cash machines running out of banknotes and sympathy for Athens among EU governments close to exhausted, Greece's fate is largely in the hands of the European Central Bank and of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
The ECB's policymaking governing council was holding a conference call on Monday to decide how long to go on keeping Greek banks afloat after the overwhelming rejection of bailout terms the central bank had helped to shape.
Merkel, under mounting pressure in Germany to cut Greece loose from the eurozone, meets French President Francois Hollande in Paris later in the day to seek a joint response ahead of an emergency summit of eurozone leaders in Brussels on Tuesday (July 7).
Public opinion in Europe's biggest economy is fast turning against any further aid to Greece, and Merkel's vice-chancellor, Social Democrat Sigmar Gabriel, said on Sunday that Tsipras had torn down the last bridges of compromise with the eurozone.
After five years of economic crisis and mass unemployment, Greek electors voted 61.3 percent 'No' to the bailout conditions rejected this month by their radical leftist government, casting Greece into the unknown. - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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