ATHENS
(Reuters) - Greece held a new round of talks with foreignlenders to
bridge differences over 2 billion euros of disputedausterity cuts on Tuesday, with time running
short to clinch a deal before a meeting of euro zone ministers next week.
Athens has
been haggling for weeks over 12 billion euros of cutbacks that its European Union and International Monetary Fundlenders have
refused to sign off on over fears that some of the proposed savings are unlikely
to materialize.
For the
second day in a row, inspectors from the "troika" ofEuropean Commission, European
Central Bank and
IMF lenders had to face rows of angry Greeks heckling them as they entered a
ministry building to start discussions.
At the labor
ministry on Tuesday, dozens of disabled Greeks and their carers blocked the
main entrance and chanted "We won't let it pass!" in protest at the
cuts. One held a banner saying: "They handed 200 billion to bankers but
cut down on medicine, treatment and benefits for the disabled."
The protests
came a day after Greece unveiled an austerity budget that predicted a sixth
year of recession in 2013 but failed to convince the troika, which has been
skeptical of Athens' plans to cut health and defense spending.
"The
troika is questioning the effectiveness of the measures related to structural
reforms," a government official said, citing planned savings from
restructuring entities in health and other ministries.
The official
expressed optimism that a deal with the troika would be struck by the end of
the week, but a second government source cast doubt on that, saying such an
outcome now appeared "difficult".
Finance
Minister Yannis Stournaras was
non-committal on the issue. When asked by reporters, after a meeting with Prime Minister
Antonis Samaras, whether an agreement with the troika could be reached
before the EU Summit on October 18, he replied: "We'll see".
NO UNIFIED
STANCE
Both sources
said talks over the cuts were being further complicated by an internal rift
between the EU and the IMF over how to solve the Greek crisis, as reported by
Reuters last week.
The IMF
wants Greece to cut its debt further to make up for going hugely off-track from
the terms of its bailout, while Europe is resisting the option of a new debt
restructuring and instead prefers to give Athens more time to get back on
track, officials have told Reuters.
"If the
troika doesn't have a unified stance, the negotiations become more
difficult," the first official said.
Failure to
get a deal by Monday will be another setback for Greece's efforts to quickly
unlock its next installment of aid, without which the debt-laden country faces
bankruptcy and the prospect of an exit from the euro zone.
Athens needs
the troika's blessing on the austerity package as well as a positive review by
inspectors on the country's progress in meeting the terms of its bailout to
secure that aid.
But with
European leaders scrambling to shore up bigger economies like Spain and Italy,
analysts say Greece will eventually be handed enough aid to keep afloat to
avoid throwing the bloc into further turmoil.
(Additional
reporting by Lefteris Papadimas and Dina Kyriakidou; writing by Deepa
Babington; editing by Rosalind Russell)
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