Desperate CNN frauds and deviant liars along with other corporate MSM shills and hacks now attempt to confuse Greeks, broadcasting reports claiming they "do not understand" the referendum
AGENCIES
07/04/2015
Police have thrown stun grenades and scuffles have broken out with protesters in central Athens.
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A Greek pensioner tries to get her money out of
the bank
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It’s understood the clashes broke as a rally got under way in support of a ‘no’ vote in a Sunday referendum on whether to endorse an aid deal with creditors.
The scuffles involved a few dozen people, many dressed in black and wearing helmets.
For Tsipras, if voters back a bailout plan that he has scorned, his
government is likely to fall, leading to new elections by September. Tsipras and his finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, remain convinced Athens can negotiate better terms, including debt relief, if voters reject the conditions.
“I want to believe that these problems won’t last long,” Tsipras said on Thursday of the bank closures. “The banks will open when there is a deal,” he said in a television interview, predicting it would come within 48 hours of the referendum.
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CNN's smirking junkie Natalie Allen along with pimp George Howell working overtime for their corporate masters in a vain attempt to save the EU from dissolving, trying now when all else has failed to confuse Greek voters on the upcoming referendum claiming voters "don't understand" ballot or the issue |
The only full survey to be released since the referendum was announced showed the “No” vote ahead, but falling sharply after the announcement that
banks would be shut.
Reuters reports that the EU tried in vain to stop the IMF publishing a scathing analysis of Greece's debt burden, which has been supported by Alexis Tsipras today.
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Allen and CNN corporate thugs now actively targeting Greek pensioners with derision, contempt saying they are acting like "spoiled children" |
The report laid out in full the extent of Greece's financing woes and called for mass debt relief, putting the Fund at loggerheads with its European partners.
Reuters however reports that at a meeting of the IMF's board on Wednesday, European members questioned the timing of the report which IMF management proposed at short notice releasing three days before Sunday's crucial referendum.
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A desperate Lagarde now doubles down
on IMF financial terrorism, attempting to
pull a Bush/Obama steamroll operation
on Greek pensioners
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There was no vote but the Europeans were heavily outnumbered and the United States, the strongest voice in the IMF, was in favor of publication, the sources said.
The Europeans were also concerned that the report could distract attention from a view they share with the IMF that the Tsipras government, in the five months since it was elected, has wrecked a fragile economy that was just starting to recover.
"It wasn't an easy decision," an IMF source involved in the debate over publication said. "We are not living in an ivory tower here. But the EU has to understand that not everything can be decided based on their own imperatives."
"Facts are stubborn. You can't hide the facts because they may be exploited," the IMF source told Reuters.
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MSM spews 24 hour pro-"YES" vote propaganda |
With tension building, police firing stun grenades briefly scuffled with a few dozen black-clad people carrying red flags, often carried by anti-establishment radicals, on the capital's central Syntagma square. The violence appeared to be isolated.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras exhorted Greeks to reject the deal, dismissing warnings from Greece's European partners that to do so may see the country leave the euro zone, with unforeseeable consequences for Greece, Europe and the global economy.
In a televised address, Tsipras said a report by the International Monetary Fund which argued that Greece's massive public debt could not be sustained without significant writedowns vindicated his advice to reject the lenders' terms.
Repeating his assault on European partners he accused of blackmailing and issuing ultimatums to Greece, the leftist leader called for calm ahead of Sunday's ballot.
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"NO" vote projections outnumber "YES" in latest polls |
"On Sunday what is at stake is not Greece's membership of Europe, what is at stake is whether blackmail will lead us to accept the continuation of a policy which the lenders themselves recognize is a dead end," he said.
"On Sunday what is at stake is whether we will give our consent to the slow death of the economy."
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Allen will wind up getting her "fix" in short order, along with CNN |
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis called the IMF report "music to our ears".
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