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Greek Government Bashes Germany, asks for WW2 money |
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Thursday, 18 February 2010 |
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You know you are in financial trouble when you go back to WW2 and ask
Germany for 'war damages'. As irony would have it, Greece is asking for
'war money' from the country which essentially created Greece in 1835.
Greek
opposition lawmakers said on Thursday that Germans should pay
reparations for their World War Two occupation of Greece before
criticising the country over its yawning fiscal deficits.
"How does Germany have the cheek to denounce us over our finances
when it has still not paid compensation for Greece's war victims?"
Margaritis Tzimas, of the main opposition New Democracy party, told
parliament."There are still Greeks weeping for their lost
brothers," the conservative lawmaker said during a debate on a bill to
clean up the country's discredited statistical service. This type of silly rhetoric will only further frustrate the Germans who have poured billions into Greece for the past 20 years.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's government
has so far deflected appeals to promise aid to heavily indebted Greece,
despite fears that failure to help Athens could threaten the euro.
Merkel's
stance is backed by opinion polls showing that a vast majority of
Germans oppose a bailout, and Germany's biggest selling daily Bild has
lambasted Greece as a nation of lazy cheats who should be "thrown out of
the euro on their ear".
But Greek lawmakers from three left-wing
and conservative opposition parties said Germans had no right to claim
the moral high ground.
Six deputies from the small Left Coalition
party urged the government to press Berlin over the reparations issue
and blamed German banks and politicians for Greece's crisis.
"By
their statements, German politicians and German financial institutions
play a leading role in a wretched game of profiteering at the expense of
the Greek people," they said in a written question to the government.
Responding
to criticism that Greece fiddled its figures to get into the euro in
2001, communist MP Nikos Papaconstantinou asserted that Germany was not
above using such tricks itself.
"As if we didn't know that
Germany inflated the value of its gold reserves to get into the euro,"
he said.
In 1960, Germany paid Greece about 115 million
deutschemarks to compensate victims of Nazi persecution. However, some
Greek pressure groups say this did not cover civilian victims of
reprisals and a forced occupation loan.
Finance Minister George
Papaconstantinou refrained from joining the attack on Germany.
"We
all have our criticism as to how public opinion in one or the other
country perceives the Greek problem," he said during the debate.
He
added that New Democracy, which is allied with Merkel's Christian
Democrats in the European People's Party, should have addressed any
criticism to Germany while it was in government until last October.
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