German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble waits
before the start of a meeting of eurozone finance ministers at EU
headquarters in Brussels, March 9, 2015. © AFP
Germany’s finance minister says Greece may leave the
19-member eurozone if the administration in Athens fails to clinch a
final agreement with its international creditors.
Speaking
in an exclusive interview with German-language Austrian public
broadcaster, ORF, on Friday, Wolfgang Schaeuble said the possibility of
Greece’s departure from the European Union’s monetary bloc cannot be
excluded.
“To the extent that Greece is solely responsible and
decides what is to happen, and we don’t know exactly what Greek leaders
are doing, we can’t exclude it,” he said in reference to an exit from
the eurozone by the Greek government.
“Europe is ready to help Greece, but Greece must let itself be helped,” Schaeuble stated.
Meanwhile,
the president of the European Commission has said he is not satisfied
with the progress in talks over Greece’s bailout loans, but he rejects
the possibility that Athens might be forced to exit the eurozone.
“I
am not satisfied by the developments in the recent weeks. I don’t think
we have made sufficient progress, but we will try to push in the
direction of a successful conclusion of the issues we have to deal
with,” Jean-Claude Juncker said ahead of talks with Greek Prime Minister
Alexis Tsipras in the Belgian capital, Brussels, on Friday.
“I am
totally excluding a failure, I don’t want a failure. I would like
Europeans to go together. This is not the time for division, this is the
time for coming together,” he added.
Eurozone
finance ministers agreed on February 24 to give Greece a four-month
extension of its international bailout to avert the possibility of the
country’s exit from the currency area.
But Athens will not get any of the cash until eurozone partners approve a list of reform measures proposed by Greece.
The
Tsipras administration has tried to revise the terms of the country’s
€240-billion (USD 270 billion) bailout it received from the troika of
international lenders - the European Central Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and the European Union - following the 2009 economic
crisis.
Last
month, Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis warned that his
country’s exit from eurozone would trigger a collapse in the “house of
cards.”
“Greece’s exit from the euro is not something that is part
of our plans, simply because we believe it is like building a house of
cards. If you take out the Greek card, the others will collapse,”
Varoufakis told Italy’s national public broadcaster RAI.
MP/HSN/SS
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