Wed. Nov 27th, 2024

Anxious Cypriots queued outside Popular Bank ATM machines on Thursday to withdraw their cash as fears rose that the country’s financial crisis will mean its second largest lender closes for good.

 

Cyprus Popular Bank, Laiki Bank, eurozone lenders
Cypriots and foreigners wait in line to withdraw money from an ATM of a Laiki (Popular) Bank branch in the old city of the capital, Nicosia, on March 21, 2013.

“It’s all about cash now. Only a gambler will take cheques in this situation,” said retired government official Phaedon Vassiliades as he withdrew money from the bank’s ATM at Nicosia’s Ledra Street tourist hot spot.

Behind the wheelchair-bound Vassiliades, a queue of apprehensive men and women waited to claw back as much as they can, while tourists took pictures on mobile phones and cameras.

“There are rumours that Laiki Bank (the Greek name for the Popular Bank) will never open again. I want to take out as much as I can,” Vassiliades told AFP.

“I have nearly 60,000 euros ($77,000) as savings in this bank and some credit societies. I don’t know if I will ever get it back now. This is what I had and now it seems it is all gone.”

Similar queues of worried Popular Bank depositors formed across central Nicosia, with some using more than one ATM card to withdraw whatever they could, often to the annoyance of those waiting.

Depositors spoke to AFP of panic after reports that the government, struggling to halt a potential meltdown since an EU bailout package was first announced, was considering merging Popular Bank with the Bank of Cyprus.

The latter is the island’s largest bank.

In an effort to ease the panic, Central Bank spokeswoman Aliki Stylianou denied the rumours of the bank’s closure, speaking on state radio.

 

Cyprus Popular Bank, Laiki Bank, eurozone lenders
Retired government official Phaedon Vassiliades withdraws money from an ATM of a Laiki (Popular) Bank branch in the old city of the capital, Nicosia, on March 21, 2013. “There are rumours that Laiki Bank (the Greek name for the Popular Bank) will never open again. I want to take out as much as I can,” Vassiliades told AFP.

And Popular Bank later imposed a limit on cash withdrawals of 260 euros a day, saying the curb was due to “high demand for cash” from customers taking out their daily limits of up to 700 euros.

On Thursday, politicians agreed to set up an investment fund as part of a Plan B aimed at securing a bailout deal with eurozone lenders, while also ruling out a tax on bank deposits that torpedoed an earlier deal.

Popular Bank customers said they did not trust the government’s efforts, however.

“Cyprus is sinking. They (the EU and the international community) are prepared to let Cyprus sink,” said Gautam Kapoor, a Briton working for a Greek metals company, as he waited outside another Popular Bank ATM.

“The markets have already factored in the Cyprus debacle. Nobody is going to have trust in Cyprus again. I just want to withdraw cash as much as possible as even fuel stations and departmental stores are now accepting only cash.”

The manageress of a nearby fuel station confirmed that only ready money mattered now.

“I am helpless. I have to pay cash to my fuel supplier so I’m accepting only cash,” Photoulla Zantis told AFP.

Several people queueing for money were distraught, especially at the Popular Bank’s prospects.

“I have lost nearly a million euros… my entire savings,” said retired teacher Takis Photiades at one of the bank’s ATMs in Nicosia.

“These bankers have let us down for years now. I invested in the bank’s bond issue a few years ago and that too is of no value.”

Behind him an angry crowd argued about what will happen next.

“We are doomed. Our sunny days are over,” said Neophytos Constantinides, an insurance company employee.

“The EU has let us down. It is time to get Russia again and teach a lesson to the EU,” shouted one angry man.

Finance Minister Michalis Sarris was embarking on a second day of talks in Moscow Thursday on possible aid.

Russians including wealthy tycoons hold between a third and half of all Cypriot deposits and are believed to have more than $30 billion in private and corporate cash in the Mediterranean island’s banks.

“Laiki Bank will be the first one to go down as it has a lot of Russian money and the EU wants to hit Russia. We are caught between the two,” said another depositor who asked not to be identified.

Source: AFP

By vivian