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Greece set for first debt reduction talks

Athens - Greece's new anti-austerity government is set to hold its first talks on Friday with its eurozone partners about its ambitions to secure a reduction in the massive debts linked to its €240bn international bailout.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is due to meet Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the current head of the eurozone group of finance ministers, in an encounter that Athens said would mark the start of Greece's negotiations on revising the conditions of its massive bailout.

But the talks come hot on the heels of a warning by the European Union and Germany that there was little support for reducing the debt, which the radical new government is hoping to cut in half.

Ahead of the Friday meeting, Greek bank stocks rebounded on Thursday after plunging the day before on concerns about the first moves of Tsipras's radical new administration to roll back several reforms underpinning the bailout.

European parliament chief Martin Schulz on Thursday became the first foreign dignitary to meet Tsipras' government, and said the prime minister had assured him that Greece would seek "common ground" with its EU peers.

Schulz added that Tsipras had stressed Athens would not seek a "unilateral solution" to the renegotiation of its multi-billion-euro bailout.

But in an interview late on Thursday, Schulz said Tsipras' coalition alliance with the Independent Greeks, a hardline nationalist party, was "not something good for the country".

"This government will enter into confrontation with the European Union at a time when dialogue is needed," he told SKAI TV.

Elected on Sunday, the new government has already begun to roll back years of austerity measures demanded by the EU and the International Monetary Fund in return for the huge bailout granted to avoid a financial meltdown in 2010, and says it will negotiate to halve the debt.

'Debt reduction not on radar'

But European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said a reduction of the €315bn debt linked to the bailout "is not on the radar".

"I don't think there's a majority in the Eurogroup... for a reduction of the debt," he told Germany's ARD television, referring to the eurozone's finance ministers.

Sigmar Gabriel, Germany's vice-chancellor and also its economy minister, said he expected Greece to "stick to its commitments" for fiscal and economic reform made in exchange for the bailout.

He was critical of a decision by the new government to scrap the privatisation of major ports and power companies, decisions which have also drawn a rebuke from China that has a major investment in one of the ports.

READ: Greek prime minister halts port sale

Greece said negotiations would start in earnest with Dijsselbloem's visit on Friday, with the finance ministry saying it hoped talks could lead to "a viable, comprehensive agreement to rebuild our social economy".

Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister, will meet Tsipras and his outspoken Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, a maverick economist who regularly shares his thoughts on his personal blog.

Varoufakis will ramp up Greece's efforts to rally support for a renegotiation when he visits Britain, France and Italy next week.

Greek stocks rebound

Greek bank stocks rebounded by nearly 13% on Thursday after plunging by more than a quarter a day before.

The Athens market closed 3.16% higher on Thursday, driven by the banks' partial recovery.

The Greek central bank said €4.0bn in private deposits had been withdrawn from banks in December.

Daniele Nouy, head of the European Central Bank's Supervisory Board, said despite the post-election turbulence, Greek lenders were "pretty strong".

Tsipras' government was also embroiled in its first foreign policy row after it complained to Brussels over allegedly not being consulted when the EU threatened new sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine.

EU foreign ministers eventually overcame Greece's reluctance and agreed on Thursday to extend the sanctions against Russia.

Tsipras' Syriza party has been seen as pro-Russia, with Moscow's ambassador becoming the first foreign official to be received by the prime minister after his election victory. Many party members are former Communists.

Tsipras, who ousted the conservatives of former prime minister Antonis Samaras, has said Greece is no longer prepared to bow to the "politics of submission", in a clear swipe at its international creditors.

Finance Minister Varoufakis has said the government wants "a pan-European New Deal" to encourage growth and help the continent deal with Greece's crisis.

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