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With their nation on the brink, Greek voters to decide referendum

 
Supporters get vocal during a rally in Athens on Friday backing the Yes vote on whether Greece should accept more austerity in return for bailout loans. Voters go to the polls today.
Supporters get vocal during a rally in Athens on Friday backing the Yes vote on whether Greece should accept more austerity in return for bailout loans. Voters go to the polls today.
Published July 5, 2015

ATHENS, Greece — After five months of bitter backroom talks and poisonous public smackdowns between officials in Greece and Europe, the fate of this nation-on-the-brink will shift into the hands of the Greek people today.

A substantial majority of voters in this nation of 11 million are expected to turn out for a referendum that will ask them to answer either "yes" or "no" to a jargon-saturated question about Europe's now-expired bailout offer.

Although the ballot doesn't say so, Greece's future in Europe, the survival of its government and the welfare of a population that has endured the most profound economic collapse of any developed nation since World War II could all be on the line.

Greeks will vote after a week that has been perhaps the most difficult for the country since its debt crisis began nearly six years ago. Banks stayed shut, with ATMs dispensing a meager maximum of 60 euros (about $66) per customer. Food banks and hospitals reported shortages of basic supplies. At offices and shops, deals were put on hold as Greeks anxiously wondered whether the week's turmoil was a prelude to something far worse.

On the final day before the vote, neither side was permitted to campaign. But officials in Greece and around Europe managed to work in some final insults as they sought to persuade a population that polls show is split almost exactly even between "yes" and "no."

Greece's outspoken finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, accused the country's European creditors of "terrorism," saying they hope to scare Greek voters into defying their own government and choosing "yes."

"Why have they forced us to close the banks? To frighten people," Varoufakis told the Spanish newspaper El Mundo in an interview published Saturday. "And when it's about spreading terror, that is known as terrorism."

Varoufakis told El Mundo that he did not believe Greece's creditors were serious about kicking the country out of the euro, as they have repeatedly threatened.

"It's too much money and I don't believe Europe could allow it," he said, estimating the toll for the continent at a trillion euros.

Varoufakis also vowed to the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung that regardless of which way Greece votes, the country will sign a bailout deal with Europe on Monday.

European officials have scoffed at such claims, with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble reiterating on Saturday that any new talks would be "very difficult."

Greece and Europe have been on a collision course since January, when Greek voters elected the radical leftist Syriza government on a platform of ending the strict austerity imposed here as a condition for massive bailouts.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras called the surprise referendum a little over a week ago, hoping to gain leverage in his bargaining over the terms of the country's cash-for-cuts deals.

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But Syriza officials say they believe their paymasters are now trying to bring down the government through a "yes" vote.

Greece's banks may not last much longer without a deal. The banks have about $1.1 billion of reserves remaining, enough to last through the end of Monday or Tuesday morning, the head of the National Bank of Greece, Louka Katseli, said Friday.

The European Central Bank can choose to bolster the amount of emergency assistance it gives Greek lenders, or it can pull the plug, a decision that would immediately cause the banking sector to collapse. It could also help trigger Greece's exit from the euro.

That prospect terrifies "yes" voters.

" 'No' will bring about a catastrophe," said John Seretis, 39, a pharmaceuticals distributor. " 'Yes' will bring about many difficult things. But at least we'll be in the euro."

But Kyriakos Roussopoulos, a 41-year-old chef, said the government should be willing to blaze its own path if the country's creditors won't yield.

"We can make a new history," he said. "We Greeks say that with an olive tree and a ship, we can build everything again from scratch. I may be poor for the next 10 years, but my kids will be better off."