Italy PM says Europe must restart talks after Greek vote

Italy PM says Europe must restart talks after Greek vote

ROME - Agence France-Presse
Italy PM says Europe must restart talks after Greek vote

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, center, speaks with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, left, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a round table meeting at an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday, June 25, 2015. AP Photo

Whatever the outcome of Greece’s knife-edge referendum, Europeans must “start talking to each other again,” Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi told a newspaper on July 4. 

“When you see a pensioner crying in front of a bank,” he said referring to a striking picture taken on July 4 by AFP of 77-year-old Giorgos Chatzifotiadis in Greece’s second city Thessaloniki, “you realize that a country as important for the world and its culture as Greece cannot end up like this,” he told the Il Messaggero daily.     
Italy PM says Europe must restart talks after Greek vote
AFP Photo

He said as soon as the Greek vote was over “we must start talking to each other again. No one knows that more than (German Chancellor) Angela Merkel.”     

Berlin has taken a particularly hard line on Greece, accusing Athens’ radical government of walking out on negotiations by calling the referendum.

Renzi, who has tried to steer a middle course between Athens and its creditors, added, “Of course it is impossible to save Greece without the engagement of the Greek government and pension reforms, cracking down on tax evasion and a new labor market.”   

He insisted that Italy was not likely to be affected by fallout from any eventual Greek implosion. 

“We are not saying that everything is going to be fine, we only say that the work that has been done in the last few months puts Italy in a (better) condition than it was in the past. We are no longer in the dock, we are no longer spoken of in the same breath as our unfortunate Greek friends.”   

Renzi has recently been at pains to point out that the Italian economy is in a much healthier state and is not likely to be hit by contagion.

“Italy is already out of the line of fire,” he said when he was asked if he was worried about the market ramifications of a Greek meltdown on Spain, Portugal and Italy.