Greek government submits list of reforms to Brussels

ASTANA. KAZINFORM - He has in his own words, "won a battle, not the war." Now Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tspiras must wait for the big guns of Brussels to react to his list of reforms.

photo: QAZINFORM

The government has already indicated there will be measures to tackle tax evasion and to streamline the civil service. Brussels must see the complete list by Monday evening.

A German newspaper has reported Athens will seek to raise 2.5 billion euros from the fortunes of rich Greeks, 2.5 billion from back taxes and 2.3 billion from a crackdown on tobacco and petrol smuggling.

Discussions on the proposed measures will get underway on Tuesday with the Eurogroup of eurozone finance ministers.

"I feel optimistic, even though I was not a supporter of this government- I was with the others - but now I am with them. If they succeed, I will back them," said Anna, a pensioner living in the Greek capital.

Athens said its aim is for the list of reforms to be accepted by their lenders in a bid to receive the four month extension to its bailout package. The deal is widely seen as a major climbdown for Prime Minister Alexis Tspiras who won power vowing to reverse budget cuts, Kazinform refers to Euronews.com.