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Greek FM to meet German counterpart after ECB turns up heat

Greece's new finance minister will meet his German counterpart Thursday, a day after the European Central Bank piled fresh pressure on Athens by cutting off Greek banks' access to a key source of much-needed cash.
 
Yanis Varoufakis will hold his first talks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, whose country is seen as the strongest opponent of any easing in the terms of the massive debts Greece has built up, in Berlin.
 
The ECB's decision to no longer allow Greek banks to use government debt, which has a junk rating, as collateral for loans will likely feature heavily in their talks.
 
The announcement rattled financial markets, sending the euro tumbling by more than one percent against the dollar, and prompting the Greek finance ministry to insist that the country's banking system "remains adequately capitalised and fully protected".
 
The ECB statement came just hours after Varoufakis held his first talks with ECB chief Mario Draghi as part of his push to renegotiate his country's 240-billion-euro (US$270 billion) EU-IMF bailout.
 
Both Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Varoufakis — whose left-wing Syriza party stormed to victory in elections on 25 January — have been touring Europe in recent days to build support for a new debt agreement with creditors.
 
Elected on a pledge to end austerity policies imposed on Greece as part of its bailout, Tsipras faces the delicate task of persuading his European partners to reverse course while ensuring Athens still gets the aid required to avoid a default.
 
In Brussels, Tsipras struck an upbeat note after talks with European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker and EU president Donald Tusk, saying he was optimistic of a "viable and mutually acceptable solution".
 
A Greek government source said Tsipras and Juncker discussed plans to jointly create a four-year reform plan for Greece, as well as a bridging deal to give Athens time to draw up plans for reforms including on corruption and tax evasion.
 
But Tusk acknowledged that resolving the showdown over Greece's debt was likely to be "difficult" and needed "cooperation and dialogue as well as determined efforts by Greece".
 
'Fruitful' ECB talks 
 
Ahead of the ECB talks in Frankfurt, Varoufakis told the German weekly Die Zeit that the ECB "should support our banks so that we can stay afloat", acknowledging that Greece was "a bankrupt country".
 
The former economics professor later described his talks with Draghi as "very fruitful".
 
But after a meeting of its policy-setting governing council late Wednesday, the ECB said it was ending a special lending waiver for Greece because "it is currently not possible to assume a successful conclusion of the programme review".
 
The ECB waiver, which will end on 11 February, had allowed banks to pledge their Greek bonds as collateral, even though the securities did not meet standards for a minimum credit rating.
 
Separately, a Financial Times report suggested that Draghi might block a key element of Athens' plan.
 
According to the FT, which cited officials involved in the deliberations, the ECB is refusing to raise an agreed cap on the amount of short-term treasury bills that Athens can issue from 15 billion to 25 billion euros.
 
Greece faces key payments on its debt at the end of February and again at the end of May.
 
The International Monetary Fund — the third part of the so-called "troika" that oversees Greece's bailouts along with the European Commission and ECB — said meanwhile it was not in debt talks with the Greek government.
 
The new government has blamed its fiscal problems mainly on the austerity shackles fixed by Germany, and Varoufakis could face a testing time when he meets Schaeuble.
 
Athens says these restrictions have choked growth in an economy that has shrunk by a quarter, failed to cut unemployment that stands at over 25 percent, and made it impossible to service a mountain of debt worth 1.75 times its annual economic output.
 
But German Chancellor Angela Merkel tried to squash talk that Syriza could play on divisions within Europe, insisting that there were no substantial differences between major eurozone nations.
 
"I don't think that the positions of the member states of the eurozone with regard to Greece differ, at least in terms of substance," she said.
 
In a bid to quell Western worries over the new Greek government's closeness to Russia at a time of Cold War-style tensions, Varoufakis said meanwhile that Athens would "never" seek loans from Moscow.

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