Greek parliament passes crucial second set of reforms

Greek parliament passes crucial second set of reforms

PanARMENIAN.Net - Greece has taken a crucial step towards a bailout after its parliament passed a crucial second set of reforms, BBC News reports.

The passage of the measures means that negotiations on an €86bn European Union bailout can begin.

The reforms include changes to Greek banking and an overhaul of the judiciary system.

Thousands demonstrated outside of parliament as the bill was debated, with protests briefly turning violent as petrol bombs were thrown at police.

There had been fears of a rebellion by MPs but Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was easily able to muster the support required. In total, the measures received 230 votes in favour and 63 against with five abstentions.

Among those who voted against were 31 members of his own Syriza party. However, this represents a smaller rebellion than in last week's initial vote, according to the BBC.

Former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis was one of those rebels in the first vote who returned to vote with the government this time.

Speaking before the vote, Tsipras stressed that he was not happy with the measures that creditors had imposed. "We chose a difficult compromise to avert the most extreme plans by the most extreme circles in Europe," he told MPs.

Representatives of the European institutions that would provide the bailout funds will begin negotiations in Athens on Friday, July 24.

Last week, Greece passed an initial set of austerity measures imposed by its creditors. These were a mix of economic reforms and budget cuts demanded by the eurozone countries and institutions before bailout talks could continue.

This second set of measures passed early on Thursday morning were of a more structural nature, including:

-a code of civil protection aimed at speeding up court cases

-the adoption of an EU directive to bolster banks and protect savers' deposits of less than €100,000

-the introduction of rules that would see bank shareholders and creditors - not taxpayers - cover costs of a failed bank

More contentious measures - phasing out early retirement and tax rises for farmers - have been pushed back to August.

On Wednesday, the European Central Bank (ECB) increased its cash lifeline to Greek banks. The emergency injection of an extra €900mln, the ECB's second in a week, came just hours before the vote.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) confirmed on Monday that Greece had cleared its overdue debt repayments of €2.05bn and was no longer in arrears. The repayments, which included €4.2bn to the ECB, were made possible by a short-term EU loan of €7.16bn.

Greece's next major deadline is August 20, when it must pay €3.2bn owed to the ECB, followed by a payment of €1.5bn to the IMF in September.

The protest in Athens' Syntagma Square - called by Greece's public sector union - was reported to have been largely peaceful, until a number of petrol bombs were thrown in the direction of police.

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