Following Cyprus & Economy, Tumbling Down The Hill
Cyprus Financial Crisis Last Minute
Bailout Deal, How Will We All Be Affected?
The European Union is in shambles. Read Entire
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A key meeting of eurozone finance ministers to finalise a crucial bailout for Cyprus has been delayed as talks to hammer out an agreement overran.
President Nicos Anastasiades is locked in talks with EU,
European Central Bank and
IMF leaders in
Brussels. The finance ministers - know as the
Eurogroup - must decide on Sunday whether or not to approve the bailout. Cyprus needs to raise 5.8bn euros (£5bn) to qualify for a 10bn euro EU bailout and avoid bankruptcy. A eurozone official said the Eurogroup meeting had been rescheduled for later on Sunday evening because talks with Cypriot officials ahead of those discussions had overrun.
Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan said he was "expecting quite a long night''. "I think a deal will be done tonight but I think it will be late, because a lot of detail has to be worked out,'' he said. Mr Anastasiades reportedly asked the heads of the "troika" - the IMF, European Central Bank and
European Commission - if they wanted him to quit. "Do you want to force me to resign?"
Cyprus News Agency quoted him as saying, citing sources at the presidential palace.
"I am giving you one proposal, and you do not accept it. I give you another and it's the same. What else do you want me to do?" he was quoted as saying. In another development on Sunday,
Bank of Cyprus - the island's biggest lender - further limited cash machine withdrawals to
120 euros a day. With queues growing outside cash machines across the island, the second biggest lender,
Laiki (
Popular)
Bank, also lowered its daily limit to
100 euros, Cyprus News Agency reported. The bank's previous limit had been 260 euros per day.
Banks have been closed since Monday and many businesses are only taking payment in cash. In the run-up to the crunch talks in Brussels, the
EU's commissioner for economic affairs
Olli Rehn said the island had only "hard choices left" and must agree terms on Sunday. "
Unfortunately the events of recent days have led to a situation where there are no longer any optimal solutions available," he added. A source close to the negotiations has told the
BBC's Mark Lowen in Cyprus that the rescue plans - as they stand - involve splitting
Laiki Bank into "good" and "bad" banks.
Good assets would be merged with Bank of Cyprus and the toxic assets will stay in Laiki. Administrators will then be appointed to liquidate those assets. The bank will not be closed but will be hugely reduced in size.
The source said a 20% levy would be imposed on deposits over 100,
000 euros (£85,000) in Bank of Cyprus in exchange for shares in the bank.
A 4% levy would then be imposed on deposits of more than 100,000 euros in other banks. This would need to be approved by parliament but enough MPs have already given their backing to ensure it would pass. Our correspondent says that the changes, should they pass, would cut Cyprus's banking sector by between a third and a half.
Parliament rejected a bank levy on small and large deposits earlier this week. The levy that was rejected would have taken 6.75% from small savers and 9.9% from larger investors. It caused widespread anger among ordinary savers. If a deal on an alternative agreement fails, the European Central Bank (
ECB) says it will cut off funds to the banks, meaning they would collapse, possibly pushing the country out of the eurozone. "The negotiations are at a very delicate stage," said government spokesman Christos Stylianides. "The situation is very difficult and the time limits are very tight."
There is concern on the island that a levy on large-scale foreign investors, many of whom are
Russian, would damage its financial sector. But leading Cypriot bankers have urged parliament to accept a levy, with small savers exempted. Correspondents say
Germany has pushed hard for a levy on investors who have benefited from high interest rates in recent years, rejecting a Cypriot plan to use money from pension funds. Cypriot Finance Minister
Michael Sarris recently travelled to
Moscow in an unsuccessful attempt to get Russian help. Banks in Cyprus have been closed since Monday and many businesses are only taking payment in cash. On Saturday afternoon more than 1,000 bank employees marched to the Cypriot finance ministry, stopping briefly at the presidential palace.