The leader of the runner-up party in Greece’s national election, the Radical
Left Coalition’s Alexis Tsipras, has rejected a coalition with the winning
conservative party.
Following 40-minute talks with conservative leader
Antonis Samaras, Mr Tsipras said the two parties’ views were diametrically
opposed. He demanded the cancellation of austerity measures many blame for
deepening economic woes.
Mr Samaras, who was given three days from today
in which to build a coalition or pass on the mandate to Mr Tsipras, was also
meeting with the head of the third party, the socialist PASOK.
Mr
Tsipras’ refusal to co-operate with the conservatives, while anticipated, makes
it even less likely that Mr Samaras will be able to form a strong enough
coalition. It also increases the possibility that Greece will be forced to hold
repeat elections in mid-June.
``The campaign positions of Mr Samaras are
at the opposite end of the alternative proposals of a left-wing government,''
said Mr Tsipras, who strongly opposes Greece's bailout
commitments.
“There can be no government of national salvation, as
(Samaras) has named it, because his signatures and commitments to the loan
agreement do not constitute salvation but a tragedy for the people and the
country.”
Another election, possibly as soon as next month, looms for a
country that is reliant on international support to avoid
bankruptcy.
Yesterday’s vote saw parties backing the draconian
international rescue package lose their majority in parliament – raising the
chances of a possible Greek exit from the common euro currency.
The
uncertainty weighed on markets across Europe, with the Athens exchange closing
6.7 % down.
Official results showed conservative New Democracy came first
with 18.85% and 108 of
Parliament’s 300 seats. Mr Samaras, who backs
Greece’s bailout commitments for austerity but has called for some changes to
the bailout plan, will launch coalition-forming talks later in the
day.
“I understand the rage of the people, but our party will not leave
Greece ungoverned,” Mr Samaras said.
But even with the support of the
only other clearly pro-bailout party elected, Socialist PASOK, New Democracy
would fall two seats short of a governing majority.
If the deadlock does
not ease, Greece faces new elections under a caretaker government in mid-June,
about the time it has to detail new drastic austerity measures worth €14.5bn for
2013-14.
In June, Athens is also due to receive a €30bn instalment of its
rescue loans from the other countries in the 17-strong eurozone and the
International Monetary Fund. If aid is cut off, analysts at Commerzbank
estimated the country would have trouble paying its debts by
autumn.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Athens would still be
expected to live up to its agreements.
“Of course the most important
thing is that the programmes we agreed with Greece are continued,” she
said.
Her remarks were echoed by a European Commission spokesman, Amadeu
Altafaj Tardio, who stressed the need for “full and timely implementation” of
Greece’s agreement with its international creditors and underlined that
“solidarity is a two-way street”.
Analyst Vangelis Agapitos said
protracted instability would threaten the country’s eurozone membership.
Greece’s debt inspectors – the eurozone, IMF and European Central Bank,
collectively known as the troika – could turn the screws by halting release of
the bailout funds until Athens moves forward with its pledged
reforms.
“Europe can live without Greece but I don’t think Greece can
live without Europe,” he said. “If the troika is bluffing, Greece will remain in
the euro. But if the troika says: ’I can negotiate, but first show me some
progress,’ Greece has no progress to display right now.”
“If the troika
rattles our bars, then either the people will come to their senses at the next
elections or the country will enter an alternative course, and when we open that
door we will see what kind of chaos – or paradise – lies behind,” Mr Agapitos
said.
Yesterday’s big winner was Mr Tsipras’ party, whose unprecedented
second place with 16.78% gives it 52 seats.
Disaffected voters deserted
PASOK and New Democracy, the two mainstays of Greek politics, leaving them at
their worst level since 1974, when Greece emerged from a seven-year
dictatorship.
Instead, strong gains were registered by smaller parties,
including the extremist Golden Dawn, which rejects the neo-Nazi label and
insists it is nationalist and patriotic.
Golden Dawn has been blamed for
violent attacks on immigrants and ran on an anti-immigrant platform, vowing to
“clean up” Greece and calling for land mines to be planted along the borders. It
got 6.97% of the vote – a stunning improvement from 0.29% in 2009 – and won 21
seats.
The election was Greeks’ moment to vent their fury over two years
of austerity that Athens has been pushing through to qualify for bailout loans.
Incomes, benefits and pensions have been slashed repeatedly and taxes hiked.
Unemployment has soared to a record of over 21%.
PASOK, which has spent
21 years in government since 1981 and stormed to victory with more than 43% in
2009, saw its support slashed to 13.18%.
Mr Samaras also held talks with
Evangelos Venizelos, the leader of PASOK. Both Mr Samaras and Mr Venizelos have
indicated any unity government would have to include more than just their two
parties.
Read more: http://www.breakingnews.ie
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