Athens, 4 July 2015 – Greece split down the middle on the eve of the referendum: Split in the square, split in the picture that emerges from the latest polls. Last night two opposing events and an appeal of Tsipras closed the brief referendum campaign. And to heat the pre-election debate is the attack of the Minister of Finance greek Varoufakis pointing the finger at creditors: “ What they are doing has only one name: terrorism “. “Because we were forced to close the banks? To scare people. And when it spreads terror, this is terrorism,” he said in an interview with El Mundo . Interviewed also by the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, says: “I expect that on Monday we will have an agreement. And this will happen regardless of whether they win the yes or no.” And again: “Do not listen to those who say that there is an offer on the table. It ‘obvious that there is, because that’s what they want.” Varoufakis then attacks his German counterpart, Wolfgang Schaeuble: “Since 2012, Schaeuble said to prefer a Grexit” .
IN ATHENS PIAZZA: 25 thousand FOR ‘NO’, 20 thousand FOR ‘YES’
“compulsory levy ON ACCOUNTS” – Fear in Athens for the news came late on yesterday by the Financial Times , which assumes a compulsory levy of 30% on current accounts with more than 8,000 Euros. Hypothesis though flatly denied by both the Finance Minister Yannis Varoufakis on Twitter, that the president of the Greek banking, Louka Katseli, that ” does not exist such a scenario in any Greek bank, and even as far hypothesis “. “And ‘non-existent and evil,” he cut short, recalling that deposits are guaranteed up to 100,000 euro (although the newspaper said that Greece only has 3 billion in insurance fund that would cover them). A cut in bank deposits of Greeks “would be against the law of the European Union” , said the President EBA, Andrea Enria, claiming to be unaware of the hypothesis and announcing an immediate appeal for “violation of EU rules” if the measure were to be adopted.
RENZI – Renzi reiterates that “ Italian should not be afraid of the Greek crisis “. If before Italy and Greece “were fellow sufferers, now it is not so.” “We are the ones that solve problems, not the problem”.
SCHAEUBLE – The German Finance Minister Schaeuble , does not rule out “a Greek exit from the euro, but also in the case of some Greek banks collapse, the risk of infection is relatively low.”
THE VOTE TOMORROW – I almost 10 million Greek voters are called to the polls tomorrow to vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to new austerity measures proposed by international creditors in exchange for aid. The polls will open at 7 am local time (6 in Italy) and close at 19 . The first reliable results should be known around 21 rooms, once it made the counting of about 10% of the data, according to the indications given by SingularLogic, the computer company that will manage the voting process.
POLLS: SARA ‘HEAD TO HEAD – The trend of recent days: will be uncertain until the outcome of the last referendum . The last two surveys released Friday give virtually equal in the two camps, with a difference of a few tenths between ‘Yes’ and ‘No’. Specifically, according to a survey Gpo the percentage of favorable agreement with creditors is 44.1% while that of opposites is 43.7%. According to a survey Alco the ‘Yes’ is 44.5%, against 43.9% of’ No ‘.
FILE / REFERENDUM: HERE C’ And ‘KNOW
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