Italia e Estero

'Fmi posticipa la visita a Mosca dopo obiezioni alleati Kiev'

epa04824585 (FILE) A file photo dated 18 May 2011 showing the logo and name of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at the entrance of the Headquarters of the IMF, also known as building HQ2, in Washington, DC, USA. Greece will not make the 1.6-billion-euro (1.8-billion-dollar) repayment due 30 June 2015 to the International Monetary Fund unless it strikes a deal in the coming hours with its creditors, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in Athens as the deadline loomed. He implied that his left-wing government would resign if Greeks vote 'yes' in a planned 05 July referendum on a renegotiated bailout. The Greek vote is widely seen as deciding whether the near-bankrupt country stays in the eurozone. No country has left the currency bloc since its founding in 1999. EPA/JIM LO SCALZO
epa04824585 (FILE) A file photo dated 18 May 2011 showing the logo and name of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at the entrance of the Headquarters of the IMF, also known as building HQ2, in Washington, DC, USA. Greece will not make the 1.6-billion-euro (1.8-billion-dollar) repayment due 30 June 2015 to the International Monetary Fund unless it strikes a deal in the coming hours with its creditors, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in Athens as the deadline loomed. He implied that his left-wing government would resign if Greeks vote 'yes' in a planned 05 July referendum on a renegotiated bailout. The Greek vote is widely seen as deciding whether the near-bankrupt country stays in the eurozone. No country has left the currency bloc since its founding in 1999. EPA/JIM LO SCALZO
AA

NEW YORK, 18 SET - Il Fondo Monetario Internazionale posticipa a data da destinarsi la sua prima attesa visita in Russia da quando Mosca ha lanciato l'invasione dell'Ucraina. Lo riporta il Financial Times, secondo il quale la decisione è legata alle pressioni degli alleati europei di Kiev. Gli ispettori del Fondo avrebbero dovuto visitare Mosca alla fine del mese per la visita di routine per la stesura dell'Article IV. Ma in una lettera Polonia, Danimarca, Finlandia, Lituania, Lettonia, Estonia, Islanda e Norvegia hanno messo in guardia delle conseguenze della visita dal punto di vista della reputazione del Fmi. "Avrebbe segnalato alla comunità internazionale che il Fmi è pronto a tornare al business as usual, compiendo un passo verso la normalizzazione delle relazioni con l'aggressore", si legge nella missiva riportata dal Financial Times

Riproduzione riservata © Giornale di Brescia

Condividi l'articolo

Iscriviti al canale WhatsApp del GdB e resta aggiornato

Argomenti