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Cyprus president to ask EU for more help

Last month, Cyprus and its international creditors agreed a 17 billion euro bailout package for the country

AFPPTI Nicosia
Last Updated : Apr 12 2013 | 8:50 PM IST
Cyprus' president said today that he will ask the European Union to provide more help for the crisis-hit country, which has to pay for most of its expected 23 billion euro ($30 billion) bailout.

President Nicos Anastasiades said that he will send letters to EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and EU Council chief Herman Van Rompuy telling them of the "need for a change of EU policy" toward Cyprus by offering additional assistance because of the crisis and "the measures that they imposed on us."

News of the letters sparked speculation among investors that the country was pushing for more money from its international creditors; the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, under its bailout package.

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However, government spokesman Christos Stylianides said this request for help would only involve asking to tap the EU's structural and social cohesion funds, which are run by the EU to help countries develop their infrastructure, for more money and would not be seeking more bailout cash.

Last month, Cyprus and its international creditors agreed a 17 billion euro bailout package for the country so it could rescue its banking sector and prop up its economy. The euro countries and IMF would contribute 10 billion, with Cyprus making up the rest mostly by overhauling its banks.

However, since then, the bailout package has increased to 23 billion euros, with Cyprus's share swelling to 13 billion euros, according to a draft document by its creditors. The 6 billion euro increase is due to economic forecasts for the country being much worse than originally thought. Cyprus is heading further into recession and the government will now have to have to make up for more lost tax receipts and missed loan payments.     

The deputy leader of Cyprus's ruling Democratic Rally party today downplayed the jump in the country's bailout share, calling it "a simplistic approach" that doesn't "correspond with reality."

Averof Neophytou said the additional amount that Cyprus must fork out had already been calculated and incorporated into the overall bailout deal and doesn't mean that the country will now have to scrounge for more cash.

Neophytou explained that 10.6 billion euros will come from the restructuring of its banking sector, which includes imposing heavy losses on deposits over 100,000 euros in the two largest lenders, Bank of Cyprus and Laiki.

The rest of the money will come from additional taxes, a rollover of the country's debt held by domestic investors, privatizations, a part-sale of the central bank's gold reserves and better terms for the country to pay off a 2.5 billion euro loan that Russia had granted in 2011.

As part of its bank restructuring, and to prevent a run on the country's banks, Cypriot authorities have imposed a series of capital controls; the first that any country has applied in the eurozone's 14-year history.

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First Published: Apr 12 2013 | 8:49 PM IST

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