The Greek Government is meeting Monday to discuss the latest plan, as it emerged that former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis called a telephone conference on 16 July, during which he said that he had hired an IT expert to set up a parallel banking system.
According to the Greek newspaper Kathimerini, he told investors that he had hired an IT expert to hack into the General Secretariat for Public Revenues in order to get the information needed to set up the system:
"The prime minister, before we won the election in January, had given me the green light to come up with a Plan B. And I assembled a very able team, a small team as it had to be because that had to be kept completely under wraps for obvious reasons."
Third Bailout "Unsustainable"
Senior figures within the Syriza party have said the third bailout plan will prove unworkable and that Greece should prepare for a possible fourth bailout and a return to the drachma. The IMF has said the current bailout terms are "unsustainable".
Even the European Commission has raised doubts about the plan. In a statement, it said: "These past six months of stop-go negotiations have been a period of growing distrust on the part of many European governments vis-à-vis the Greek government. And in several countries, national parliaments need to agree to provide new assistance for Greece.
"They [several countries] want explanations for why after two financial assistance programs, five years of close monitoring, and over $515 billion in assistance, we are again asking for European solidarity for Greece. Some of these countries have themselves made very significant efforts to get their economies back on track. Some are less wealthy than Greece. All want to be able to know whether this time it`s different."
As preparations begin for the talks on Tuesday, there is no guarantee the Greek Government can implement the package, without serious civil unrest.
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