The EU approved a short-term loan of 7.16 billion euros ($7.8
billion) to Greece allowing it to meet a huge payment to the ECB and
repay the IMF while a new bailout is still being ratified, the EU's top
official for the euro said Friday.
"We have an
agreement on bridge financing.... This agreement is backed by the 28
member states," Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told
Greece must pay the European Central Bank a huge debt payment of
4.2 billion euros as early as Monday, and is in arrears to the IMF.
The
bridging loan allows Greece to clear its debt to the IMF and to repay
the ECB while the modalities of a fresh bailout, agreed in principal by
European leaders on Monday July 20,2015, is still under negotiation
The loan will be given through the EFSM, a rescue fund set up at
the time of Greece's first bailout in 2010 but that involves the whole
of the 28-nation EU, not just the 19 eurozone members.
The
loan will officially be for three months, but only provide enough cash
to hold Greece over until August 20, when the country owes the ECB
another huge debt payment
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