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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Cyprus bailout: 'people are panicking, they're afraid of losing their money'

Cypriots tell of shock finding government had seized up to 10% of savings – despite promise deposits would be safe

Under the palm trees of Larnaca's waterfront promenade, George Kyprou was staring out to sea and scratching his head. "I don't know what to do," he said. Like most Cypriots, he was astonished to wake up one bank holiday weekend morning to discover the government had seized up to 10% of everyone's savings from their bank accounts without warning.

Kyprou, 62, born in Larnaca, had worked most of his life as a chauffeur and driver in England, proudly buying his London council flat and scrimping to put aside money in Cyprus for when he returned for holidays and eventually to retire. "I'd put aside £50 here, £20 there, all my life," he said. Over decades, he had built up around €6,000 (£5,200) in a Larnaca account. "It was a state building society; I assumed it was safe."

But now, as depositors holding less than €100,000 are made to pay 6.75% and those with more than €100,000 9.9% as part of a €10bn (£8.7bn) bailout agreed in Brussels, Kyprou stands to lose €400 overnight. "That's a lot for someone like me," he said.

When he heard the news on Saturday morning, he rushed to the cashpoint and queued with others who were panicking and trying to take out as much money as they could. The media reported a run on ATMs that were depleted by mid-afternoon. But with Cyprus taking immediate steps to prevent any money transfers over the weekend, ordinary savers realised there was little they could do to lessen the blow.

On Sunday the parliament of Cyprus postponed a crucial debate and vote on the move until Monday, without giving a reason. Banks will remain closed for several days because of the holiday.

In Larnaca, the third largest city on the tiny eastern Mediterranean island, the queues at cashpoints had shrunk by Sunday night but the mood was one of shock, anger and injustice. Only three weeks ago, Cyprus voted in elections where, for once, the island's defining issue of its 40-year-old division into the Greek-speaking south and the Turkish north was overtaken by more urgent worries. The country of 1.1 million people had been ravaged by its worst economic crisis since the 1970s, with unemployment at a record high of 15% and fears of meltdown in a bloated banking sector which was more than eight times the size of the nation's economy. The Conservative winner Nicos Anastasiades promised at least that savers' deposits were safe. This weekend he accepted bailout terms that turned that promise on its head.

Stelios Zinga, a truck driver in his late 50s, had joined the cashpoint queues. "People are panicking, they're afraid of losing their money, they don't feel they can trust banks anymore," he said. "The problem with this levy is that it is the cautious, working-class people who are being made to pay."

His work as a driver had already suffered from the economic downturn, and he now felt it would plummet. The classic Cypriot education ethic, where hard-saving parents supported their children studying abroad, would feel the strain, he said. "My son is studying chemical engineering in Edinburgh. I'm worried I won't be able to get money to him."

Christiana Konteati, 26, a lawyer, who finished a degree in London three years ago, said: "We're really worried that this is only the beginning: next will come salary cuts, austerity, rising unemployment and very likely people going abroad to work."

She said the younger generation didn't have savings to fear for but a large part of her graduate friends were unemployed including a translator, a marketing graduate, a physicist and an accountant.

One flabbergasted Larnaca bank employee, 28, was grabbing a coffee before returning to the rolling TV news he said the nation was glued to. He found the bank levy an "extraordinary" surprise. "Are we the guinea pigs? There's a feeling they are trying this out on us before they do it elsewhere. Let's see how the markets react."

Further along the promenade, some bristled at the charge in Europe that Cyprus, flush with Russian cash, was a conduit for money-laundering and that the European decision-makers felt the rich Russian depositors should be made to pay. More than 25% of bank deposits and about one-third of foreign investments in Cyprus come from Russia. So many Russians now live in the port city of Limassol that it has been dubbed "Limassolgrad". "We need foreign investment and it could now shrink," said one student, arguing that most savers in Cyprus were Cypriots.

Many felt resentment at the EU and its financial decision-makers would grow. Others wondered whether a better solution to the nation's financial woes was the recent discovery of gas deposits that amounted to more gas than Cyprus could use in over a century, and which it hopes to begin exporting by 2018, potentially meeting a major part of the EU's annual demand.

As always, the emotional resonance from the island's bloody division 40 years ago, was never far from the surface. One retired teacher who had to flee her village in the north in 1974, said: "They're taking money, but at least now I have a home and clothes to change into. Back then, we had nothing. Cyprus will come through this somehow."


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Cyprus savings levy prompts Osborne to guarantee British workers' deposits

3,000 military personnel and 250 civil servants protected from tax imposed as part of island's bailout by EU and IMF

The savings of British military personnel and civil servants in Cyprus are to be protected against a bank levy being imposed as part of the island's €10bn (£8.7bn) bailout, the government has revealed.

An estimated €2bn of British deposits are held in Cyprus, including accounts for 3,000 military personnel and 250 civil servants. The chancellor, George Osborne, told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC1 on Sunday: "For people serving in our military, people serving our government out in Cyprus – because we have military bases there – we are going to compensate anyone who is affected by this bank tax. People who are doing their duty for our country in Cyprus will be protected from this Cypriot bank tax."

He said Cypriot banks based in the UK would be unaffected by the 9.9% levy on savings over €100,000. There will also be a 6.75% levy on savings below €100,000 as part of the fifth eurozone bailout, agreed early on Saturday by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

The news that Cypriots would have their savings raided to bail out the country's ailing banks has threatened to reignite Europe's debt and currency crisis.

Small and medium-scale savers in Greek Cyprus voiced outrage at the one-off tax on deposits. Mounting opposition led to a crucial emergency parliament session on the deal being put off until Mondayin Nicosia.

President Nicos Anastasiades, only in his first weeks in office, warned of a catastrophe if the plan was not accepted as he came under intense pressure from the eurozone and European Central Bank to ensure the levy was enacted.

Cypriot banks are to remain closed for several days following the move, unique in three years of turmoil over eurozone sovereign debt. But the knock-on effect, undermining confidence in pledges from EU leaders that ordinary savers are safe from financial chaos, fed fears of runs on banks in other vulnerable countries, such as Spain and Italy.

Cyprus is the first eurozone bailout to hit savers, breaking repeated vows from politicians, including Anastasiades recently, that such a tax would not happen.

However, it is far from the first time the public has been forced to meet banks' failings. In Ireland, the taxpayer paid for the colossal costs of bank failure. In Greece last year, private investors were forced to take "haircuts" on their investments in struggling Greek banks. The German government, driving this policy, declared repeatedly that Greece was "unique" and that this would never happen again.

Similar statements about Cyprus were issued at the weekend, despite earlier promises that all European deposits under €100,000 were safe in the banking crisis. A European Commission spokesman said that the guarantee applied only to a banking collapse, not to a banking rescue, confirming that small savers' money was safer in the case of bankruptcy.

The German government and the International Monetary Fund, both drivers of the surprise depositors' tax scheme agreed early on Saturday in Brussels, voiced satisfaction. The IMF chief, Christine Lagarde, said: "The IMF has always said that we would support a solution that is sustainable, that is fully financed, and that appropriately allocates the burden sharing. I believe that the agreed package meets these three objectives."

But on Sunday in Nicosia, the new Anastasiades government struggled to muster the parliamentary support required to get the bailout package through.

Martin Schulz, head of the European parliament, while agreeing that savers should bear some of the bailout costs, called for changes to exempt those with savings under €25,000.

Sharon Bowles, the Lib Dem MEP who chairs the parliament's monetary affairs committee and has been closely involved in the euro crisis, was withering. "The single market has been sold down the river for a shoddy price," she said.

"This grabbing of ordinary depositors' money is billed as a tax, so as to try and circumvent the EU's deposit guarantee laws. It robs smaller investors of the protection they were promised.

"If this were a bank they would be in court for mis-selling. The lesson here is that the EU's single market rules will be flouted when the eurozone, European Central Bank and IMF say so."

Cyprus is a major haven for the funds of wealthy Russians, with the German intelligence service recently estimating up to €20bn in Russian deposits. Unless they have been part of a recent capital flight, the Russians stand to lose fortunes under the 9.9% levy.

Anatoly Aksakov of Russia's regional banking association said confidence in the Cypriot banking sector had just been wiped out.

"The Russians have lost €3.5bn in a day," said Forbes Magazine. The IMF insisted on raiding savers' accounts to bring down the cost of the eurozone/IMF bailout to €10bn on the grounds that the €17bn needed by Cyprus would raise government debt to unsustainable levels.

The Germans supported the levy to ensure that wealthy Russians contributed and that German taxpayers were not paying out to secure Russian money. And it appears that Anastasiades insisted on spreading the levy to ordinary savers to lower the burden on the wealthy and try to prevent them fleeing Cyprus as a low-tax banking haven.


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Head of World Jewish Congress to Greece: Condemn Holocaust deniers


Head of World Jewish Congress to Greece: Condemn Holocaust deniers
Ynetnews
Ron Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress called on Greece to denounce the activities of the far right party, “the Golden Dawn,” and said that he hoped the Greek parliament would present a law punishing those who denied the Holocaust.


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Midfielder banned from Greece teams for life over Nazi salute


CTV News

Midfielder banned from Greece teams for life over Nazi salute
CTV News
ATHENS -- AEK Athens midfielder Giorgos Katidis has been banned from any Greek national team for life after giving a Nazi salute while celebrating a goal in the Greek league. Greece's football federation said Sunday in a statement that the player's ...
Katidis banned from representing Greece after celebrating goal with 'Nazi salute'Daily Mail
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Greece hands Katidis lifetime banMARCA.com
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Albanian prisoner releases hostages, drops escape bid


San Francisco Chronicle

Albanian prisoner releases hostages, drops escape bid
Reuters
ATHENS | Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:20pm EDT. ATHENS (Reuters) - An Albanian criminal who has already used a helicopter to stage two prison breaks in Greece has failed in his third escape bid, releasing five prison guards he had held hostage for nearly 24 ...
Greece prison siege ends with killer's surrenderBBC News
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All Share Services


All Share Services
Salon
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Officials say an Albanian inmate who took five people hostage at a Greek prison in an effort to escape has surrendered, ending a 24-hour standoff. No one was injured on Sunday when Alket Rizaj, a convicted contract killer, gave up.

and more »

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Attempted prison escape ends in Greece

This photo taken by an unnamed prisoner with a cellphone shows hostages, both prison officers and prisoners, being held by Albanian convict Alket Rizaj at Malandrino prison, in central Greece, on Saturday, March 16, 2013. Rizaj is demanding to be allowed to leave the prison, claiming to be heavily armed. Police special forces have deployed outside the prison, while prison officers, Rizaj's lawyer, and a prosecutor try to negotiate with him. (AP Photo)ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Officials say an Albanian inmate who took five people hostage at a Greek prison in an effort to escape has surrendered, ending a 24-hour standoff.



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Cyprus bailout: big implications in a small-scale rescue

With its bank spending and Greek links it was inevitable Cyprus would need help, but this package may be a game-changer

It was always a case of when, not if, Cyprus would join the list of eurozone countries requiring a bailout to rescue them from financial crisis. But the peculiarities of the support package coupled with the economic weakness across the rest of the 17-nation single currency area suggest that this could be a game-changing moment.

Cyprus has faced two big problems. The first is that its banks went on a lending spree during the good times – by 2011, they had made loans worth more than eight times the country's national output. Even Britain, the most spectacular example of a big developed country that allowed an overblown banking sector to threaten the entire economy, did not go quite that far.

The second problem was the close links between Cyprus and Greece, a country gripped by a brutal slump that has seen the size of the economy shrink by 20% in four years. Cypriot banks had made loans to Greece worth 160% of GDP and the losses on that high level of exposure have been rising rapidly.

Greece is also a key trading partner for Cyprus, so there has also been a direct impact on the Cypriot economy from the austerity imposed on Athens.

But while there was never a doubt that Cyprus would need help from the so-called troika of the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the European Central Bank, the dealannounced at the weekend differed in one significant way from the ones that have gone before it: bank deposit holders in Cyprus will have to foot part of the bill themselves.

The reason for this is simple. There is a lot of Russian money in Cyprus, much of it from somewhat dubious sources. With the richer countries of the eurozone suffering from bail-out fatigue, there was resistance – particularly in Germany – to the idea that ordinary European taxpayers should be writing blank cheques to Russian oligarchs who might have been using Cyprus as a money laundering destination.

As a result, there will be a "stability levy" of 6.75% on all bank deposits of less than €100,000 (£87,000) and 9.9% for those above €100,000. In addition, there will be the now familiar strings attached to the financial help: austerity and structural reform.

By the standards of previous rescues, the €10bn handed to Cyprus is chickenfeed. But even before the ink was dry on the agreement, financial markets were fearing that the deal could have wider ramifications than the troika expects.

One issue is whether the "stability levy" is unique to Cyprus or will be applied to other – much bigger – eurozone countries that might require help. Telling Spanish bank depositors, for example, that they would have to follow the Cypriot precedent would risk inflaming a country already experiencing widespread social unrest.

The assumption in Brussels, Frankfurt and Washington seems to be that Cyprus is the coda to the eurozone crisis – a last echo of problems that are now all but resolved. Yet that view may not be shared in the markets, where many analysts have seen the calm that has descended on the single currency since last summer as a phoney peace.

Ever since Greece precipitated the crisis in late 2010, events in the eurozone have been marked by periods of extreme tension punctuated by periods of stability. The one since last July when Mario Draghi, the president of the ECB, said he would do "whatever it takes" to safeguard the euro has been the longest so far.

Yet, the economic news from the eurozone has remained grim. In 2012, there was not a single quarter of positive growth and activity is still weakening. Italy's political impasse has added to fears that it may just take the disturbance of one small rock to set off another avalanche of selling in the bond markets. Cyprus could be it.


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Greek Midfielder Banned From National Team For Life After Possible Nazi Salute


Greek Midfielder Banned From National Team For Life After Possible Nazi Salute
Deadspin
Giorgos Katidis is a former captain of the Greek under-19 team and current midfield for AEK Athens. On Saturday, he scored a game-winning goal in a Super League match against Veria and went on to strip his shirt off and salute the crowd as shown above ...


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Greek footballer banned for life for Nazi salute


Hindustan Times

Greek footballer banned for life for Nazi salute
Hindustan Times
The Greek football federation condemns unequivocally and categorically such actions," an announcement by the federation said. The federation said that it will take all appropriate steps "to preserve the peaceful nature of football and to promote the ...


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Greek footballer given lifetime national ban after apparent Nazi salute


The Guardian

Greek footballer given lifetime national ban after apparent Nazi salute
The Guardian
Katidis was heavily criticised by political parties and fans on Twitter and Facebook following the incident at the Athens Olympic Stadium. Sunday marks the 70th anniversary of Greek Jew deportations in Nazi concentration camps in the Second World War.


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The Greek Clean Monday or Koulouma Customs


Greek Reporter

The Greek Clean Monday or Koulouma Customs
Greek Reporter
Greek folklorist Nikolaos Politis (1852-1921), argued that the word comes from the Latin “cuuiulus”, which means both abundance and end. Thus, the koulouma stand for the culmination of the carnival period and also the beginning of the season of the ...


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Nazi salute by Greek soccer player brings outrage, ban for life


The Guardian

Nazi salute by Greek soccer player brings outrage, ban for life
Washington Post (blog)
A Greek soccer player has been banned for life from the national team for giving a Nazi salute as he celebrated a goal Saturday. The gesture by Giorgos Katidis, the 20-year-old midfielder for AEK Athens, “is a deep insult to all victims of Nazi ...
Greek soccer player gets lifetime ban for apparent Nazi saluteLos Angeles Times
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Major interest among Greek banks for Cypriot portfolios


Kathimerini

Major interest among Greek banks for Cypriot portfolios
Kathimerini
There is broader interest among Greek lenders for the acquisition of the portfolios of Cypriot banks in Greece, a government official stated on Sunday, as the board of the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund (HFSF) was meeting on Sunday evening to take ...


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Life ban from Greece teams for Nazi salute player


NBCNews.com

Life ban from Greece teams for Nazi salute player
NBCNews.com
ATHENS, Greece (AP) -AEK Athens midfielder Giorgos Katidis has been banned from any Greek national team for life after giving a Nazi salute while celebrating a goal in the Greek league. Greece's football federation said Sunday in a statement that the ...
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Convicted killer takes hostages in Greek prison


BBC News

Convicted killer takes hostages in Greek prison
BBC News
An Albanian contract killer who escaped twice from a high-security prison in Greece has taken six hostages in what appears to be a new bid to get away. Alket Rizaj took the hostages on Saturday at the Malandrino prison in central Greece and is reportedly ...
Albanian prisoner seizes hostages in third Greek escape bidReuters
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RT -GlobalPost
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'God of War: Ascension' True to Series

In the God of War games, you play as Kratos, a Spartan soldier in ancient Greece bent on destroying each and every Greek god that gets in his way. Previous titles in the series have slain an entire pantheon, from Hades to Zeus, so as...



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