Monday, 25 March 2013

Cyprus: 'Stealing what's already been stolen'

Let’s speak about what’s going on in Cyprus. In my view  they continue stealing what's already been stolen,” Dmitry Medvedev said in Russia's first official reaction to the deal agreed over the weekend.

"We have to figure out what this story turns into in the long run, what the consequences for the international financial and monetary system will be - and thus, for our own interests as well," Medvedev said.

Analysts believe that Russian depositors whose savings in Cypriot banks total around €25 billion will suffer the most from the “haircut”.
“Europe today is in a situation comparable to that of the French revolution or the Bolshevik revolution. By that I mean an entire class of people, in this case the so-called rich Russian oligarchs, who apparently have been laundering their money in Cyprus bank accounts, are going to be expropriated, not taxed, and treated as if they were criminals,” John Laughland, the director of studies at the Institute of Democracy and Cooperation in Paris, told RT.
“It’s just as in the two revolutions I mentioned aristocrats were hung on the lampposts because it was decreed that their property had been criminally obtained. This is a very bad precedent, because it means that bank deposits, which are private property, are no longer safe in European banks.”
First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, said "
the situation looks like no further help [for Cyprus] from the Russian government will be required. "  This means Moscow hopes that Cyprus won’t need its help after the EU 10 billion bailout loan has been secured.
He added that Moscow will reconsider extending the loan to Cyprus due to be repaid by 2016, after studying the full details of the Brussels package.
On Monday spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said President Putin instructed "
the government and the Russian ministry of finance to work with their partners on the issue of restructuring the loan previously issued to Cyprus ."
Cyprus and the European creditors are yet to agree on the final details of the deposit “haircut” agreed within the 'Plan B' emergency legislation. The new rescue plan calls for a one-off fixed levy on large deposits.
Depositors in the Bank of Cyprus, the biggest bank on the island, will reportedly lose "around 30 percent" on their holdings above €100,000, the chairman of the Cypriot parliamentary finance committee said on Monday.