Finance minister warns that Greece may take legal action to block its expulsion from the eurozone
- Greece poised to become first developed nation to default on IMF
- Q&A: Where next for Athens if it doesn’t pay?
- Insight: Workers in Athens' historic meat market take stock
-
Another currency? 'New drachma' is nothing to fear
Greece debt crisis live: Too late for bailout extension to repay €1.6bn debt, German offical says
Over the course of the past week Greece's debt crisis has seen marathon summit talks in Brussels and Athens accused of 'egotism'
Here are the latest updates:
- Greece threatens legal action to block its exit from the euro
- Greece will have to leave euro if it votes no in referendum
- Athens has just one day to find €1.6bn as it edges nearer euro exit
- Greece travel advice Q&A: Tourists urged to bring cash not cards on holiday
- What are capital controls and how do they work?
Please wait for a moment wile the Liveblog loads
Alexis Tspiras, the Greek prime ministers, has put in place capital controls to restrict the movement of cash in Greece and stop the banks from collapsing. Greeks are still able to withdraw a maximum of €60 a day and officials say there is no limit on the amount that can be withdrawn by foreign accounts. People can also still pay their bills online.
Nonetheless, share prices across the eurozone fell on Monday as investors showed their concern that Greece had decided to close its banks for six business days. In London, the FTSE 100 exchange fell by 150 points, more than 2 per cent. Exchanges in German and France fell by 4 per cent.
copy http://www.independent.co.uk/?CMP=ILC-refresh
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário