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2nd LD Writethru: EU summit kicks off as leaders split over Greek debt issue

Xinhua, July 12, 2015 Adjust font size:

The leaders of 19 eurozone member countries are gathering here on Sunday to discuss Greece's bailout program as resumed finance ministers' meeting ended without an agreement.

"We just finished our meeting," Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem said at the exit doorstep of the Eurogroup meeting.

"We have come a long way, solved a lot of issues, but some big issues still remain," he noted, saying the gaps between the finance ministers would be reported to the leaders.

"So they can discuss and hopefully decide those large issues," he added.

After a marathon meeting ended fruitlessly on Saturday, the finance ministers resumed talks Sunday morning.

The crucial Euro summit along with Eurogroup meeting this weekend was widely seen as "the last try" for Greece to avert bankruptcy and exit from the European common currency zone.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras upon arrival for the summit told reporters outside the European Council building that he was there "for an honest compromise."

"I'm here for an honest compromise," he said, stressing "we can reach an agreement tonight if all parties want it."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters that it is unlikely a deal will be yielded from the crucial summit. "No agreement at any cost," she said, adding that "We have not received a unanimous notification from Eurogroup."

"We are going to examine this evening whether we can start negotiations for an ESM (European Stability Mechanism) program. But whether we succeed remains to be seen," she added.

"Most important currency is trust, and we already missed," said Merkel.

It is being rumoured in Brussels that Germany was pushing a Plan B: a five-year temporary exit of Greece from the eurozone.

In contrast to that, French President Francois Hollande pledged to try best to seek an agreement in the summit.

"France will do everything to reach agreement tonight," he said before heading into the building.

Disagreed with Germany's stands, Hollande insisted that "there's no temporary Grexit. There's Grexit or not Grexit."

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi was also set to stand up to his German counterpart and warned that "enough is enough."

"Situation is very complicated. We're all committed to reaching a deal that is about Greece but also about Europe," Renzi said.

Without a debt deal in the coming hours, Greece faces financial collapse and Grexit. Greek banks have been closed for the past two weeks and are running out of cash while the country's economy is suffering from capital controls.

Besides, Greece has been in arrears to the International Monetary Fund since July 1 and faces a 3.5-billion-euro debt repayment to the European Central Bank on July 20. (1 euro = 1.12 U.S. dollars) Endit