March 20, 2013
Cyprus rushes to find Plan B to avoid bankruptcy
AP Photo
During a crucial top level meeting of Cypriot leaders including from left to right, Presidential Advisor Constantinos Petrides, Labor Minister Harris Georgiades, Greens Party official Adonis Yiangou, Parliamentary Speaker and EDEK party leader Yiannakis Omirou, AKEL party chief Andros Kyprianou, Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades, ruling DISY party deputy leader Averof Neophytou, DIKO party boss Marios Garoyian, EVROKO party leader Demetris Syllouris, Cyprus Central Bank Governor Panicos Demetriades, and Central Bank Deputy Governor Spyros Stavrinakis during a crucial meeting to find an alternative plan to raise 5.8 billion euros to finance a bailout at the Presidential palace in Nicosia Wednesday. Cypriot lawmakers have rejected a critical draft bill that would have seized part of people's bank deposits in order to qualify for a vital international bailout.
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NICOSIA, Cyprus -- Cypriot officials rushed Wednesday to find a new plan to stave off bankruptcy, a day after Parliament rejected an initial scheme to contribute to the nation's bailout package by seizing up to 10 percent of people's bank savings.

Tuesday's decisive rejection of the plan to take a slice of all deposits above $25,888 has left the country's bailout in question. Without the bailout, the Cypriot banking sector would collapse, devastating the country's economy and potentially causing it to leave the euro.

That could roil global financial markets as well as endanger deposits in the country even further.

Government spokesman Christos Stylianides said a meeting was underway at the central bank to discuss an alternative plan for raising funds, but also for reducing the $7.5 billion that must be found domestically.

President Nicos Anastasiades met with the representatives of his country's potential creditors - the International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Commission - but issued no statement on the result. The three, known as the troika, must sign off on any Plan B the Cypriots come up with if it is to be approved as part of the bailout.

The ECB, which is keeping the Cypriot banking sector alive by allowing the local central bank to extend emergency support, has said it would end that aid if there was no bailout deal and it was clear the banks had no hope of becoming solvent again.

For now, the ECB says it will continue allowing banks access to credit. But experts note that if there's no bailout deal within days, the ECB will have to end it.

Under the initial bailout plan conceived in Brussels last weekend, other eurozone countries and the IMF would give Cyprus $12.9 billion in rescue loans if the country raised $7.5 billion through the bank deposit seizures.

The plan was initially to take 6.75 percent of deposits up to 100,000 euros and 9.9 percent on those above that threshold. That caused outrage, leading the government to propose an amended version that would have spared deposits up to 20,000 euros. But that new plan also failed to win over Cypriot lawmakers.

The central bank's deputy governor, Spyros Stavrinakis, said no decision had been taken on when banks, which have been shut since the weekend, would reopen, and that a new plan has not yet been presented to the country's euro partners and IMF.

The banks remained shut for the third day running to avoid a bank run, and there are growing expectations they may not reopen until next week - certainly not until Cypriot authorities come up with a credible financial package that has the troika's blessing.

The new plan must also win approval from lawmakers.

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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