Greece takes dig at lenders with Scrooge Christmas card

Cash-starved EU state has received three international bailouts since 2010

Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras. An e-card from the press office of the Greek finance ministry showed a picture of a frail, stingy Ebenezer Scrooge by the fire. Photograph: Alexandros Vlachos/EPA
Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras. An e-card from the press office of the Greek finance ministry showed a picture of a frail, stingy Ebenezer Scrooge by the fire. Photograph: Alexandros Vlachos/EPA

Greece's finance ministry took a page out of Charles Dickens's classic A Christmas Carol to have a dig on Friday at the international lenders who have imposed unpopular austerity on the country.

An e-card from the press office of the Greek finance ministry, sent to journalists, showed a picture of a frail, stingy Ebenezer Scrooge warming by the fire during a visit of his former business partner Jacob Marley, the ghost of Christmas Past shackled in chains.

“Perhaps all Christmas stories feature a terrifying Ebenezer welcoming the spirits of Christmas in his desolate loneliness, and perhaps our Christmas story is no exception,” the e-card reads.

Left-wing government

“But dear friends and colleagues, our wishes will prevail over all the Ebenezers of this world. A very happy new year, with health and love focused on those all around us.”

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Cash-starved Greece has received three international bailouts since 2010.

Implementation of the latest accord has been complicated by the decision of the left-wing government to give a one-off Christmas bonus to old-age pensioners, without consulting creditors first.

Scrooge, a penny-pinching, bitter old man, changed his outlook on life after being visited by spirits on Christmas Eve, according to the Dickens classic.

– (Reuters)