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Tsipras administration declares war on the corrupted banking-media establishment

Get ready for a new round of fierce propaganda in Greece against the government

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The folder of the shadow bank loans to the indebted groups of media opens the Greek finance ministry, though - at least initially - the Bank of Greece is unwilling to provide data and information to the parliament. According to a paper by the Greek FinMin, Yanis Varoufakis, submitted to the parliament, all the loan agreements approved by the banks for the indebted media businesses will be examined.

Varoufakis' paper came as an answer to the question submitted by the parliamentary representative of the Independent Greeks party, Nikos Nikolopoulos, according to which he requested the facts about the loans considered insecure according to the banking standards, taken by the Greek media. They are loans taken by the media the last five years.

According to Varoufakis' paper, the Greek FinMin submitted the question of Nikolopoulos to the Bank of Greece. However, the central bank refused to provide information about the matter claiming that such an action would violate the service-professional secrecy.

In Varoufakis' paper is stated that "the government is determined to fight the corruption and stop privileged treatment - by the banks - to the media businesses".

According to the paper, the reason for such an action is caused by the unacceptable fact that the media businesses are funded by public money - which was given to the banks through the re-capitalization process - when, at the same time, thousands of small-medium businesses are excluded from the liquidity supply. As Varoufakis points, there is a specific directive by the government to the banks not to give loans to the media businesses without conditions and guarantees.

Varoufakis also states that the government aims to examine deeply all the loan agreements to the indebted media businesses, as well as to other sectors. Everything should go public.

According to some estimations based on data that became known from the published balance sheets, today, the media capable of broadcasting nationwide, appear to have total obligations of more than 710 million euros.

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Comments

  1. Anonymous9/4/15 16:21

    Bankers hanging from lampposts globally. Long overdue.

    ReplyDelete

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