By Philip Blenkinsop
BRUSSELS, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Europe showed a willingness on
Monday to give Athens more time to pay back its debts, but
little sign that it would yield to a new Greek government's
demands of debt forgiveness.
European Union leaders and policymakers responded to Greek
anti-bailout party Syriza's election victory on Sunday with
warnings that a debt restructuring for Greece would send the
wrong message to other euro zone members.
Euro zone finance ministers gather in Brussels on Monday
afternoon to consider how to deal with Greece after the change
of government, especially given that the existing Greek bailout
program expires on February 28.
The euro fell to an 11-year low as Syriza's victory set
Athens on collision course with international lenders and
potentially threatened its place in the single currency.
Without a bailout plan Athens will not be eligible for the
European Central Bank's plan of government bond purchases and
will have problems financing itself on the market. If Greece
refuses to service its debt owed to the euro zone, private
investors are unlikely to lend to it either, officials said.
Euro zone finance ministers are likely to signal they could
extend the current bailout for Athens to give the new government
time to negotiate economic policy with international lenders and
talk about more time to pay back what Greece owes them.
Finnish Prime Minister Alexander Stubb said his country was
ready to discuss an extension if the new government can commit
to agreed contracts and promised structural reforms.
"We will not forgive loans but we are ready to discuss
extending the bailout program or maturities ... But this will
not change the fact that Greece must continue economic reforms,"
Stubb told reporters.
European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure said that
the ECB would not take part in any debt cut for Greece, but that
changes to the debt maturities were possible.
"He (Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras) has to pay, those are the
European rules of the game," Coeure told Europe 1 radio. "There
is no room for unilateral action in Europe, that doesn't exclude
a discussion, for example, on the rescheduling of this debt."
It was a message echoed across much of Europe, particularly
in Germany, whose chancellor has led calls for budgetary rigor.
Germany's top-selling Bild newspapers led with "Greeks elect
euro nightmare," the next page showing Syriza leader Alexis
Tsipras punching the air next to the headline "What is this
victory punch going to cost us?"
It added that Germany had contributed 80 billion euros so
far to the 240 billion euro Greek bailout package.
Germany's EU Commissioner, Guenther Oettinger, said a debt
restructuring for Greece would send the wrong message to other
countries in the euro zone.
"If we cut debt (for Greece), that would give the wrong
signal to Portugal or Ireland, Cyprus or Spain," Oettinger told
German radio Deutschlandfunk, adding that the new government in
Athens had to stick to agreements with its euro zone partners.
(Additional reporting by Leigh Thomas in Paris, Stephen Brown
in Berlin and Jussi Rosendahl in Helsinki; editing by Jan
Strupczewski and Anna Willard)
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