ATHENS | BY KAROLINA TAGARIS AND LEFTERIS PAPADIMAS
Greeks voted overwhelmingly "No" on Sunday in a historic
bailout referendum, partial results showed, defying warnings from across Europe
that rejecting new austerity terms for fresh financial aid would set their
country on a path out of the euro.
With nearly a fifth of the votes counted, official figures showed 60.4
percent of Greeks on course to reject a bailout offer from creditors that was
the official issue of the ballot. The figures showed the Yes vote drew 40.1
percent. An official projection of the final result is expected at 1800 GMT
(1400 EDT).
Officials from the Greek government, which had argued that a 'No' vote
would strengthen its hand to secure a better deal from international creditors
after months of wrangling, immediately said they would try to restart talks
with European partners.
"The negotiations which will start must be concluded very soon,
even within 48 hours," government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told
Greek television." We will undertake every effort to seal it soon."
Euclid Tsakalotos, the government's chief negotiator said talks could
restart as early as Sunday evening.
Many of Athens' partners have warned over the past week that a 'No' vote
would mean cutting bridges with Europe and driving Greece's crippled financial
system into outright bankruptcy, dramatically worsening the country's
5-year-long depression.
If confirmed, the result would also deliver a hammer blow to the
European Union's grand single currency project. Intended to be permanent and
unbreakable when it was created 15 years ago, the euro zone could now be on the
point of losing its first member with the risk of further unraveling to come.
"I believe such a result can be used as a strong negotiating tool
so that Europeans can understand that we are not a colony," said Nefeli
Dimou, a 23-year-old student in Athens.
Greek banks, which have been closed all week and rationing withdrawals
from cash machines, are expected to run out of money within days unless the
European Central Bank provides an emergency lifeline. Finance Minister Yanis
Varoufakis is due to meet top Greek bankers later on Sunday and State Minister
Nikos Pappas, one of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's closest aides, said it was
"absolutely necessary" to restore liquidity to the banking system now
that the vote is over.
However the European Central Bank, which holds a conference call on
Monday morning, may be reluctant to increase emergency lending to Greek banks
after voters rejected the spending cuts and economic reforms which creditors
consider essential to make Greek public finances viable, central bankers said.
In Brussels, EU officials said there would be no comment until the final
results are announced.
First indications were that any joint European political response may
take a couple of days. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President
Francois Hollande will meet in Paris on Monday afternoon. The European
Commission, the EU executive, meets in Strasbourg on Tuesday and will report to
the European Parliament on the situation.
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