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Greeks vilify IMF chief on Facebook after she brands them tax dodgers
Christine
Lagarde has been forced to express her sympathy for the Greek people
after receiving 10,000 messages on Facebook, many of them obscene.
The
Telegraph,
27
Mat, 2012
The
head of the International Monetary Fund has been forced to express
her sympathy for the Greek people after politicians and irate locals
vilified her for saying the country was a nation of tax dodgers.
After
being bombarded on her Facebook page with 10,000 messages, many of
them obscene, Christine Lagarde took to the social networking site to
say she was “very sympathetic to the Greek people and the
challenges they are facing”.
Despite
the emergence this afternoon of a new Facebook page titled “Greeks
are against Lagarde”, she reiterated that everyone should pay their
taxes.
Greek
politicians were similarly engraged, with socialist party leader
Evangelos Venizelos claiming she had “insulted the Greek people”.
The
backlash came as Greece’s former prime minister warned the country
could run out of the money by the end of June if bailout funds are
withdrawn after next month’s election.
Lucas
Papademos said that, within days of the June 17 poll, Athens risked
having a cash shortfall of €1bn (£800m).
“From
late June onwards, the ability of the government to fund its
obligations fully depends on the approval of the subsequent
instalments of loans from the European Financial Stability Facility
and the IMF,” he said.
Such
funds would be put at risk by a re-run of the May 6 poll, which
failed to produce a government willing to implement the austerity
cuts promised earlier this year to win Athens a second bailout.
“The
available funds in the Greek government will be reduced gradually
from about €3.8bn on May 11 to about €700m on June 18 and from
June 20 will enter negative territory at the level of around €1bn,”
Mr Papademos said in a memo leaked to the To Vima newspaper.
Elsewhere
in the eurozone, the president of Spanish lender Bankia, bailed out
to the tune of €23.5bn, was forced to clarify his comments that “we
don’t need to talk about giving any of it back”. Jose Ignacio
Goirigolzarri said the money would be treated as an investment, not a
loan.
Spain
is considering directly injecting its own government debt into Bankia
as part of the rescue, in an attempt to avoid borrowing money
directly from the bond markets,
The Financial Times reported
on Sunday night.
Under
the plans, the Spanish government would issue state-backed debt to
Bankia in return for equity, with the bank then able to deposit the
bonds with European Central Bank as collateral for cash. Analysts
said the move was extremely unusual and may anger the ECB.
The
latest bank bailout has triggered renewed efforts in Brussels to
devise a eurozone fund, financed by a levy on all lenders, that would
rescue any in trouble.
Raoul
Rupparel, head of economic research at think tank Open Europe, said
such a plan had some merit but added: “I question how quickly it
could get off the ground and, even if it raised tens of billions in
its first year, that would barely cover Spain”.
Outside
the eurozone, Swiss National Bank President Thomas Jordan said a
panel of government officials is considering measures including
capital controls to weaken the franc should the euro crisis escalate.
“The
working group focuses mainly on instruments to combat the franc
strength based on a joint approach of the government and the central
bank,” he told SonntagsZeitung in an interview. “We also need to
be prepared for the possibility of the currency union collapsing,
even though I don’t expect it.”
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