EU Reporter
  • News Categories
    • Featured
    • Politics
    • World
    • Defence
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Energy
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
    • Google News
    • Animal Welfare
    • Human Rights
  • Latest Videos
  • Featured
  • Collaborate
  • Sponsorship
  • About
  • Team
  • Contact
Connect with us
EU Reporter EU Reporter

EU Reporter

Germany and France press Greece to make fast, credible proposals

  • Featured
  • Politics
    • When Brussels Messes Up - the People Always Pay

    • European Union and Australia successfully conclude Horizon Europe negotiations

    • OceanEye initiative places EU at the forefront of ocean observation

    • EU's labour productivity slightly increased in Q1 2026

    • Commission calls for equal pay rules to become a reality across the EU

  • World
    • The G7 has a critical minerals plan, but it is missing a development chapter

    • Renew Europe adopts Cork Declaration: A road map for prosperity, security and reform

    • The factual and legal basis of the One-China principle is unquestionable and indisputable

    • Tanzania remains a strategic lynchpin for the West

    • Ministry of Justice directs British 'Ghost Tube Station' entrepreneur to exception in Statute of Limitations on £109 million lawsuit

  • Economy
    • Latest financial report by Corinthia Hotel owners, IHI, raises questions over financial stability

    • EU advances zero-emission truck corridors and autonomous vehicle testbeds

    • Podcast: The story behind data on hazardous chemicals

    • Debt, AI and Algorithms: How the bond market is being reshaped

    • Give your career a real take off

  • Energy
    • Commission approves €23 billion Italian state aid scheme to support renewable electricity production

    • Commission approves €9 billion Spanish capacity mechanism for security of electricity supply

    • Energy use in the industry sector continues to decline

    • Improving energy efficiency of buildings to reduce bills and save energy

    • Copenhagen Forum underlines importance of energy infrastructure

  • Education
    • Connecting classrooms with fusion research: Commission welcomes school teachers from across Europe to ITER

    • Algae4Schools open call Co-Creation Programme

    • New global science highlights business risks from nature loss, as EU steps up investment and private finance for nature

    • Explore education and training in the EU

    • The role of the IB in Azerbaijan’s education sector

  • Environment
    • OceanEye initiative places EU at the forefront of ocean observation

    • EU green jobs: Which activities employ the most people?

    • Podcast: The story behind data on hazardous chemicals

    • Commissioner Roswall meets young Europeans to discuss a resilient nature-based future

    • OceanEye: Placing the EU at the forefront of ocean observation

  • Health
    • EU increases support to contain Ebola outbreak

    • Ireland’s Presidency of the EU will link health and competitiveness

    • EU Drugs Agency warns of new health risks, including a rising trend in ketamine use

    • Impasse in European Union Tobacco Tax Reform: The Swedish veto

    • Várhelyi says unilateral measures by the US against the EU ‘would not be justified’

  • Lifestyle
    • Bach in Brussels

    • Who will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain

    • Up, up and away for iconic aircraft's model version

    • EU funded films win at Cannes

    • Zebec and Tangem bring crypto awareness campaign to Bundesliga

  • AI
  • Google News
  • Fact Check
    • Trapped in the feed: How endless scrolling warps our reality and wears us down

    • Separating fact from fiction: The BRICS currency debate

    • How Nigerian news outlets spread disinformation on the Ukraine-Russia conflict

    • Goolammv ‘unmasking’ raises more questions than it answers

    • Nova Resistência in Brazil: Identifying Dangerous Narratives and Stemming Their Influence

  • More
    • Affiliate Sites
      • London Globe
      • New York Globe
      • Globe Nederland
      • Globo Espana
      • Le Globe France
      • Globus Deutschland
      • Globo Diroma
      • Brussels Standard
      • News Wire
      • Coin Reporter
    • Animal welfare
      • Commission accelerates transition away from animal testing in chemical safety assessments

      • Europe's broken promise, 300 million times over

      • Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana will no longer promote fur at Milan Fashion

      • Parliament moves to clean up pet trade and protect animal welfare

      • Commission issues guidance for pragmatic and proportionate rules on protecting wild birds

    • Business
      • How European businesses are rethinking customer support in the AI era

      • Latest financial report by Corinthia Hotel owners, IHI, raises questions over financial stability

      • Commission updates EU Air Safety List: Air Express Algeria added, air carriers from Kyrgyzstan removed

      • Give your career a real take off

      • Flagship projects on AI for grids and data centre sustainability

    • Defence
      • Paying ISIS to keep a cement plant running: How a major French company financed one of the world's most brutal terrorist groups

      • EDF’s first-ever FSTP sub-call attracts strong interest from newcomers to EU defence funding

      • EU signs Protocol amending the Council of Europe Convention on the prevention of terrorism strengthening global counter-terrorism efforts

      • UK aid cuts are a cautionary tale for Europe

      • Costa says EU needs a '360-degree' security vision

    • Human Rights
    • Opinion
    • Online TV
    • Online Radio
    • Contact

EU

Germany and France press Greece to make fast, credible proposals

SHARE:

Published

11 years ago

on

July 7, 2015

By

EU Reporter Correspondent

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you've consented to and to improve our understanding of you. You can unsubscribe at any time.

German Chancellor Merkel gestures as she gives a speech at German sustainable development congress in BerlinBy Julien Ponthus and Lefteris Papadimas (Reuters)

France and Germany told Greece on Monday (6 July) to come up with serious proposals in order to restart financial aid talks, a day after Greeks voted overwhelmingly to reject more austerity.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel (pictured) and French President Francois Hollande, the eurozone's most powerful leaders, said Athens must move quickly if it wants to secure a cash-for-reform deal with creditors and avoid crashing out of the single currency.

Raising the pressure on Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras before a euro zone summit on Tuesday, the European Central Bank decided to keep a tight grip on funding to Greek banks.

By voting decisively against tough bailout conditions, as Tsipras had urged them to do, Greeks have strengthened his negotiating hand. But the crisis remains acute, with the country's banks already closed for more than a week to avoid a massive outflow of money that could lead to their collapse.

Only emergency support from the ECB is keeping the banks afloat and saving Greece from a chaotic euro exit that would inflict more pain on its people and gravely damage the currency, the strongest symbol of the EU's drive for an "ever closer union" on a continent once ravaged by two world wars.

In a warning shot to the banks, the ECB raised the amount of collateral they must post for any loans. The move does not affect the lenders right away, but served as a reminder that their fate lies in its hands.

In a sign that Athens is keen to seek a new deal, Greece's combative finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, resigned, apparently under pressure from other euro zone finance ministers who did not want him as a negotiating partner.

Tsipras had earlier promised Merkel that Greece would bring a proposal for a deal to Tuesday's summit, a Greek official said. It was unclear how much it would differ from other proposals rejected in the past.

Advertisement

Late on Monday, the prime minister's office said Tsipras had spoken with EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Hollande. His office did not provide details about the conversations.

After talks with Hollande earlier in the day in Paris, Merkel said, "We say very clearly that the door for talks remains open and the meeting of euro zone leaders tomorrow should be understood in this sense."

But, she added, the requirements were not in place at the moment to start negotiations about a concrete euro zone bailout fund program.

Top officials in both the United States and Japan called on both sides to seek a resolution.

US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew spoke with both Tsipras the his new finance minister and said Washington looked forward to Athens and other parties resuming conversations toward resolving the Greek situation, a Treasury spokeswoman said.

Lew voiced hope such an outcome "will allow Greece to make difficult but necessary fiscal and structural reforms, return to growth, and achieve debt sustainability within the euro zone," the Treasury statement said.

Similarly, Japan's economics minister, Akira Amari, said Greece and the European Union should work hard to strike a win-win deal that would keep Greece in the currency union.

"I understand why the Greek people are venting their frustration. Fiscal consolidation is not making progress," Amari told reporters. "They are in deflation. The world expects Greece and the EU to cooperate on a final bailout plan."

A German Finance Ministry official dismissed the idea that Berlin would be willing to concede some debt relief to Athens, a position that Tsipras's government has long sought.

But an ECB governing council member, Ewald Nowotny, held out the possibility of bridge funding for Greece while a new bailout program is being negotiated. "Whether it's possible is something that has to be discussed," he told Austrian state TV.

Hollande said: "It's now up to the government of Alexis Tsipras to offer serious, credible proposals so that this can be turned into a program which gives a long-term perspective, because Greece needs a long-term perspective in the euro zone with stable rules, as the eurozone itself does."

Share this article:

Share this:
Related Topics:chaoticchaotic euro exiteuro exitLefteris PapadimasFeaturedfull-imageJulien PonthusVanis
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
Up Next

Landmarks and public places photo ban in firing line

Don't Miss

Changing international perception of the Caribbean from tourism

Advertisement

You may like

  • Greenlanders reject US rule: EU officials stress sovereignty and strategic autonomy

  • The future for Bangladesh is looking increasingly uncertain

  • Thirty-three years of partnership: A relationship that has come of age

  • Popular
  • Latest
  • Videos
General5 days ago

Serbia’s business environment is driving its integration into the EU 

Russia3 days ago

Western investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist

Sport2 days ago

Who will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain

Aviation/airlines5 days ago

Give your career a real take off

Renewable energy5 days ago

Commission approves €23 billion Italian state aid scheme to support renewable electricity production

Economy4 days ago

Debt, AI and Algorithms: How the bond market is being reshaped

Justice and Home Affairs5 days ago

Justice and Home Affairs Council

Artificial intelligence4 days ago

Commission imposes interim measures on Meta to preserve free access to WhatsApp for rival AI assistants

European Commission48 minutes ago

When Brussels Messes Up - the People Always Pay

Critical Minerals1 day ago

The G7 has a critical minerals plan, but it is missing a development chapter

Business1 day ago

How European businesses are rethinking customer support in the AI era

Business1 day ago

Latest financial report by Corinthia Hotel owners, IHI, raises questions over financial stability

Terrorism1 day ago

Paying ISIS to keep a cement plant running: How a major French company financed one of the world's most brutal terrorist groups

Leisure1 day ago

Bach in Brussels

Kazakhstan1 day ago

President approves Digital Qazaqstan national strategy

Sport2 days ago

Who will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain

Kazakhstan2 months ago

Kazakhstan reforms under scrutiny at Brussels Press Club round table

Japan6 months ago

Japan should face up to history and contribute more to regional peace

Kazakhstan7 months ago

Ambassador calls for 'speeding up' of co-operation between EU and Kazakhstan

World10 months ago

Timur Turlov at Smart Moves Summit 2025: How chess can transform global education

Ukraine1 year ago

Shevtsova’s case: Out-of-court sanctions dismantling trust in Ukrainian cause

Transport1 year ago

The future of European transport

Politics1 year ago

Trump Vs Trueman

US1 year ago

US 'no longer' an 'unconditional ally' for Europe - MEP

  • 6,628Followers
  • 4,936Likes

Trending

  • General5 days ago

    Serbia’s business environment is driving its integration into the EU 

  • Russia3 days ago

    Western investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist

  • Sport2 days ago

    Who will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain

  • Aviation/airlines5 days ago

    Give your career a real take off

EU Reporter
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • AI Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Contact

Copyright © 2026 EU Reporter. All rights reserved.