and this too will be on the table on Thursday.
To make matters worse for Athens, the ECB has asked Greek banks to stop buying Greek treasury bills on which the government has so relied, cutting off another lifeline.
Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis claims that the ECB owes Greece 1.9 billion euros and wants to use the money to make the next repayment to the IMF at the end of March.
The sum is the money the bank has made on Greek debt it bought up at the height of the crisis, along with the sovereign debt of other struggling Eurozone countries.
Although it was agreed in 2012 that money made on Greek debt would go back to Greece, Draghi said last week that first Athens “must conform to the programme”.
The money was not the bank´s to give, he claimed, because the profits have already been redistributed to Eurozone central banks.
But Varoufakis insisted this was “the Greek people´s money” and demanded to know why “why we are being evaluated” before it is given back.
It is out of the question to restructure the 27 billion euros of Greek debt the ECB holds, one of its directors, Benoit Coeure, said in January.
But Varoufakis claimed that if the debt had been held by private banks, a part of it at least would have been written off during a restructuring in 2012.
Now, however, Athens must pay these obligations as they come due, with 6.7 billion euros falling due to the ECB this summer.
While the ECB is about to pump billions into the flagging Eurozone economy through “quantitative easing” — buying up at least 1.1 trillion euros of public and private debt — ironically Greece cannot for now benefit from its largesse.
The bank´s rules dictate that it cannot hold more than a third of the sovereign debt of any country. So until Greece pays off the debts that fall due in the summer, it will be excluded from the massive bid to kickstart growth.