Greek tragedy as G20 powers confront eurozone debt crisis

Aides, security officers and journalists watch as Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou arrives at an urgent cabinet meeting in the Greek parliament in Athens.Photograph by: Yannis Behrakis, Greek debt
CANNES - Leaders of the world's most powerful economies faced fresh turmoil Thursday at a G20 summit dominated by a titanic debt crisis which could force Greece from the eurozone and drag down Italy.
After France and Germany tried to strong-arm Athens into accepting a bailout - and with the Greek government tottering - Italy saw its borrowing costs hit record highs amid fears over Europe's bail-out mechanism.
French and Spanish bond sales also saw wider spreads, as markets lost confidence in last week's hastily compiled plan to end the debt crisis.
European stock markets plunged then recovered just as sharply, as storm clouds gathered over a summit opening ceremony in the rainswept French resort of Cannes, where leaders implored the eurozone to put its house in order.
Italy's long-term borrowing costs hit 6.4 percent, which observers warned was unsustainable, and markets across Europe opened down between 1.5 and 2.5 percent amid fears over the growing threat of a Greek default.
G20 host President Nicolas Sarkozy and his German counterpart Chancellor Angela Merkel had hoped to reassure their partners by forcing Greece's Prime Minister George Papandreou to quickly implement an EU bail-out deal.
He was summoned to pre-summit talks Wednesday and agreed to hasten his planned referendum on the plan, insisting Greece wanted to stay in the euro, but he flew home to find his parliamentary majority evaporating.
Merkel and Sarkozy had warned Greece would not receive "one more cent" of the IMF and EU's next planned eight-billion euro ($11 billion) aid installment until he wins the referendum, which he wants to hold on December 4.
Without these funds, senior officials in Cannes said, Greece might not be able to pay government employees after this date - and could face a messy debt default which would force it to leave the European single currency.
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