After meeting in Berlin,
Yannis Varoufakis says Syriza's attempt to rectify economic conditions is all
that's keeping fascists from the door
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/02/06/greek-minister-poison-troika-austerity-fueling-rise-nazi-party
Revealing the distance that
still remains between the Greek and German governments when it comes to
renegotiating terms of the bailout program, a meeting between the nation's
financial ministers in Berlin on Thursday was punctuated by the acknowledgement
that the two could not, in fact, even "agree to disagree" and a
warning from the new Syriza government that without a loosening of austerity,
fascist forces will almost surely rise.
"We didn’t come to an
agreement," said Greek
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, recently appointed to the post after
Syriza swept into power during national elections last month. "We
couldn’t even agree to disagree. We agreed to continue consultations as
partners. Our solution will have Europe’s interest as a priority."
He continued: "We did not
reach agreement because it was never on the cards that we would... We didn’t
discuss the debt, but we set the framework for discussions."
For his part, German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble indicated that his nation would remain steadfast in
its belief that Greece must adhere to the terms agreed to by the previous
government, despite the fact that Syriza was elected on clear promises to
renegotiate those terms. Without apology, Syriza has said the austerity
measures attached to loans offered by the so-called Troika—the IMF, European
Central Bank, and the EU—are crushing its economy and the Greek people and must
be reversed.
"We have a common
currency but different economic policies," Schaeuble said of his meeting
with Varoufakis. "There are commitments to the level of governments for
their budgets and they need confirmation by the Greek Parliament, but it is important
that agreed commitments and agreements must be respected."
In his remarks, Varoufakis
said that if the does not Troika bend and accept new terms, there is serious
risk that the spiraling impacts of the economic Depression in his country will
continue to fuel the rise of fascist, rightwing forces within his country.
"No one understands
better than the people of this land how a severely depressed economy, combined
with a ritual national humiliation and unending hopelessness, can hatch the
serpent’s egg within its society. When I return home tonight, I will find a
country where the third-largest party is not a neo-nazi party, but a nazi
party,” he said, referring to the Golden Dawn party which currently, despite
many of its members serving prison time for violence and corruption, holds the
third-most seats in Greek Parliament. "We need the people of Germany on
our side."
Despite those risks and
proving that members of the Troika are ready to play hardball with Syriza, the
ECB on Wednesday applied market pressure on the new government by announcing it
would no longer accept Greek-issued bonds. As explained by
Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, the
move by the powerful institution "was a clear and deliberate attempt to
undermine" the new leadership in Athens amid ongoing negotiations.
According to Weisbrot,
"They are trying to force the government to abandon its promises to the
Greek electorate, and to follow the
IMF program that its predecessors signed on to."
He concluded, "The ECB
should be ashamed of its latest assault on Greek democracy. And they should not
be able to get away with disguising it as anything less than that."
Syriza, led by Prime Minister
Alexis Tsipras, is expected to reveal its economic plan in the coming days.
As both Tsipras, Varoufakis
and other ministers returned to Athens on Thursday night, they were greeted by
a large public demonstration condemning the Troika's austerity policy.
Thousands gathered in Syntagma
Square to cheer Syriza and protest the ECB's move on Wednesday. According to
the Greek daily Ekathimerini:
Responding to a call on social
media, the crowd estimated by police at 5,000-strong stood in silence on
Syntagma Square, the scene of violent protests at the height of the Greek
economic crisis in 2012.
"It's the first
demonstration in favour of a Greek government. Finally we have a government
which respects its campaign promises and defends the interests of our
country," Telemaque Papatheodorou, an engineer in his 30s, told AFP.
The protest was called
following the decision by the European Central Bank late Wednesday to cut off a
vital source of funds for Greece's banks. [...]
"The decision by the ECB
demonstrates the pressure on Greece, but that's nothing compared to the
problems of people who are starving or suicidal," said Dimitra
Spyridopoulou, a lawyer.
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