Crisis talks on Greece to stretch into the weekend

European Commision President Jean-Claude Juncker (l), Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (c) and Luxembourg's Prime Minister Xavier Bettel look on during an EU summit at the European union headquarters in Brussels on Thursday.

After yet another inconclusive Eurogroup in Brussels Thursday, finance ministers agreed that more talks were required to bridge enduring gaps between Greece and its creditors with another Eurogroup to be held over the weekend, most likely on Saturday.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and the leaders of the country?s international creditors ? European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi and International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde ? held long talks late on Wednesday night and Thursday morning before eurozone finance ministers reconvened for the fourth time in a week.

Technical teams also met to discuss the details of two different proposals ? one from Greece and one from the creditors ? for the so-called prior actions that could lead to the conclusion of a previous program and the release of 7.2 billion euros in loans that Greece desperately needs.

Greek government sources said Athens?s proposal was largely unchanged from the document it submitted to creditors on Monday, setting out some 8 billion euros? worth of measures.

Sources attributed the negative atmosphere in the meeting to a bloc of ministers from five countries ?influenced by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble,? who was downbeat in his comments to reporters about the prospects for a deal. But Greece?s Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis indicated that ?several? of his peers had expressed criticism of the creditors? proposal.

Indicative of the fluid nature of the situation was the fact that close aides to Tsipras were unable to determine whether the premier would return to Athens after the end of a two-day summit of European Union leaders Friday or stay in Brussels for more talks with representatives of Greece...

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