
Greece's left-wing
government is to present its first concrete proposals for an alternative
debt plan at an emergency meeting of eurozone finance ministers in
Brussels later.
The government wants to overhaul 30% of its bailout obligations, replacing them with a 10-point plan of reforms.But EU ministers have warned that Greece must abide by existing terms.
The EU-IMF bailout for the debt-laden country expires on 28 February and Greece does not want it extended.
Instead the new Athens government is asking for a "bridge agreement" that will enable it to stay afloat until it can agree a new four-year reform plan with its EU creditors.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's government won a confidence vote on Tuesday, with the support of 162 deputies in the 300-seat parliament.
The Athens stock exchange then fell by more than 3% ahead of the emergency Eurogroup meeting, during which Greece's new leaders will unveil their controversial debt proposals.
Austerity under the bailout has thrown many Greeks into poverty
It rejects the "troika" team - the EU, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and European Central Bank (ECB) - overseeing the bailout's implementation.
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