Greece plunged the eurozone back into crisis and markets into panic on Tuesday with a shock call for a referendum on a debt rescue package reached only with huge difficulty just last week.

"/> Greece plunged the eurozone back into crisis and markets into panic on Tuesday with a shock call for a referendum on a debt rescue package reached only with huge difficulty just last week.

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GREECE

Euro crisis: France insists on debt deal

Greece plunged the eurozone back into crisis and markets into panic on Tuesday with a shock call for a referendum on a debt rescue package reached only with huge difficulty just last week.

Euro crisis: France insists on debt deal
World Economic Forum

Prime Minister George Papandreou’s decision to hold a confidence vote on Friday and then a referendum on the debt deal stunned investors, angered EU leaders and left the eurozone back at square one, with Italy now under pressure just ahead of a high-profile Group of 20 summit in France.

The turmoil saw some European markets slump by 5 percent and more and pushed borrowing rates uncomfortably near record levels for Italy, which can ill afford to pay extra to raise funding given its strained finances.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Greece to order, insisting, in concert with Germany, that last week’s accord was the only way to solve its debt problems.

Noting that the referendum call “surprised all of Europe,” Sarkozy said “France reminds everyone that the accord adopted … unanimously by the 17 member states … is the sole possible way to resolve Greece’s debt problems.

“Giving people a voice is always legitimate but the solidarity of all the eurozone countries is not possible unless each one agrees to measures deemed necessary,” Sarkozy said.

France and Germany, he added, took the initiative to hold a meeting on Thursday before the opening of the G20 summit in Cannes, of all European institutions, the International Monetary Fund and the Greek prime minister to discuss “the conditions under which the engagements undertaken will be kept.”

The White House meanwhile said the uncertainty caused by Greek’s move showed the need for rapid implementation of the eurozone deal.

The announcement “just reinforces the notion that … the Europeans … need to elaborate further and implement rapidly the decisions they made last week,” US President Barack Obama’s spokesman Jay Carney said.

“It remains the case that the Europeans have the capacity to deal with this crisis and they need to implement the very important decisions they made last week to provide a conclusive resolution to it,” Carney added.

The latest turn in the eurozone debt saga put Italy right back in the firing line, raising fears that it could follow Greece, Ireland and Portugal in needing a bailout and that the contagion could spread even further, to Spain.

Italian stocks closed down 6.8 percent with bank shares in free fall, in the worst session since the start of the global financial crisis in 2008.

Borrowing rates also shot up to well above 6 percent, coming close to levels that most believe cannot be sustained for the long-term.

In an effort to get ahead of the debt curve, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi promised to take “rapid” action on economic reforms, long sought by his European partners, ahead of the G20 summit.

He told German Chancellor Angela Merkel that “the Italian government is determined to introduce the measures rapidly,” his press office said.

Berlusconi had sought to ease market concern and pressure from Italy’s eurozone partners last week with promises to increase the pension age, launch a privatisation programme and reform labour laws to make firing easier.

The prime minister, who returned to Rome early from a trip to Milan as markets dropped, was due to hold talks later on Tuesday with several ministers ahead of a possible cabinet meeting this week, ANSA news agency reported.

In a brief phone call to Merkel, Papandreou told the chancellor that the referendum would “strengthen the country in the eurozone and globally” but other leaders voiced frustration and annoyance that they had not been informed of his plan at last week’s negotiations.

Commerzbank analyst Christoph Weil said many felt that the referendum call effectively left last week’s accord dead in the water, with Greece facing default and even an exit from the eurozone.

“What will happen if people say ‘No’? The risk is that the international community will turn off the supply of financing for Greece and the country will quit the euro.”

If the vote is ‘No,’ it would scupper a deal to cut Greece’s debt of more than €350 billion ($495 billion) by about €100 billion while recapitalizing the banks who will take a 50-percent loss on their holdings of Greek government debt.

The accord also includes controversial provisions to provide help for struggling eurozone states and looks forward to tighter economic and fiscal governance in the bloc, seen as vital for its future.

In a joint statement, EU president Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso said they had full trust in Greece to “honour the commitments undertaken.”

In Greece itself, however, the government appeared headed for meltdown late Tuesday as Papandreou faced defections from his party and calls for the referendum to be scrapped.

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ANGELA MERKEL

German war crime payments debated in Greece

Greece's parliament on Wednesday began a debate on a resolution to demand the payment of German war crime reparations, an issue long disputed by Berlin.

German war crime payments debated in Greece
Angela Merkel and Alexis Tsipras in Greece in January. Photo: DPA

“These demands are always active. They were never set aside by Greece,” parliament chairman Nikos Voutsis told reporters this week.

The chamber is expected to approve later Wednesday, with cross-party support, a resolution calling on the government of Premier Alexis Tsipras “to take all the necessary diplomatic and legal steps to claim and fully satisfy all the demands of the Greek state stemming from World War I and World War II”.

A parliamentary committee last year determined that Germany owes Greece at least €270 billion for World War I damages and looting, atrocities and a forced loan during the Nazi occupation in World War II.

Reclaiming war reparations has been a campaign pledge by Tsipras since 2015. He faces multiple electoral challenges this year, with his party trailing in polls.

'Historical responsibility'

During a visit to Greece in January, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said her country “recognised its historical responsibility.”

SEE ALSO: Merkel says Germany recognizes responsibility for Nazi war crimes in Greece

“We recognize our historical responsibility. We know how much suffering we, as Germany in the time of Nazism, have brought to Greece,” she said.

In 2014, ex-president Joachim Gauck had also sought public forgiveness in the name of Germany from relatives of those murdered by the Nazis in the mountains of northern Greece.

But when it comes to actual payments, the German government has always insisted that the issue was settled in 1960 in a deal with several European governments.

Germany's government spokesman Steffen Seibert reiterated Wednesday that “the reparation issue is judicially and politically settled”. 

He said Berlin is doing “everything it can so Greece and Germany maintain good relations as friends and partners”. 

During the Greek economic crisis, there was further tension in Athens over draconian EU austerity and bailout terms seen to be imposed by Berlin hardliners.

Relations have improved over the last three years after Tsipras' government endorsed conditions linked to satisfying its creditors.

Tsipras and Merkel also worked closely on finding common ground on migration and Balkans security.

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