Monday, July 6, 2015

For the German press Greeks voted for Grexit – Le Figaro

“Nobody knows what will happen between Greece and Europe”, say the newspapers in Germany. But they are unanimous: it is dangerous to resume negotiations

in Berlin Correspondent

. Few German papers find a positive meaning to the non-Greek. There is little that the TAZ , the newspaper of the radical left, to see “history in the making.” “Failure of the Greeks is a sensation,” writes the daily in an editorial, while recognizing that the consequences are uncertain. “One can only hope that the Europeans do not react hastily and did not stage a Grexit”. This assumption is on the cover of every newspaper in Germany.

“The non shocked Europe,” said the Berlin daily Tagesspiegel in its editorial. “Since Sunday, nobody knows what will happen between Greece and Europe”. “And now the Grexit?” Asks the paper inside pages. Prudent, lets talk about the daily leader of the SPD and Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, which he collected the confidences “Tsipras and his government led the Greek people on a bitter renunciations path and despair.” Athens “cut the last bridges” with Europe.

Supporters of the euro area output unvarnished assume their positions. Bild is thus addressed directly to Merkel: “And now Chancellor?” Says the tabloid as a challenge. “The Greeks voted for Grexit” continues the most read newspaper in the country in its editorial. “The EU response can only be: at once!”. Severe Angela Merkel, Bild estimates that non is “his greatest failure.” Hard with Greece, Die Welt takes his side defending the euro, which should “not be damaged” by the choice of Alexis Tsipras.

If some newspapers emphasize that the Greeks would not say no to Europe but “no to austerity”, all press is unanimous: resume negotiations be perilous. “After the drama, there is the drama,” writes the Süddeutsche Zeitung . For daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , the non Greek is “a Pyrrhic victory”. Alexis Tsipras’ can triumph “but” the result of the referendum does not match the long-term interests of Greece. ”

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment