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			 Athens said the deal struck late on Friday in Brussels should calm 
			Greeks who had feared capital controls might be imposed as a prelude 
			to leaving the euro. But some weary voters questioned what their new 
			leaders had achieved in weeks of testy exchanges with euro zone 
			hardliners led by EU paymaster Germany. 
			 
			After often ill-tempered negotiations, Greece secured late on Friday 
			a four-month extension to euro zone funding, which will avert 
			bankruptcy and a euro exit, provided it comes up with promises of 
			economic reforms by Monday. 
			 
			"We won time," said government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis. "The 
			Greek economy and the Greek government weren't strangled, as was 
			perhaps the original political plan by centers abroad and within the 
			country," he told Mega TV, without naming the euro zone hawks who 
			forced the government into a climbdown at the Brussels talks. 
			 
			Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has won wide support at home for what 
			Greeks see as their leaders finally getting tough instead of going 
			to Brussels cap in hand and taking orders from Berlin. But it was 
			also under intense pressure at home. 
			 
			About 1 billion euros flooded out of Greek bank accounts on Friday, 
			a senior banker told Reuters, due to savers' fears that the talks 
			would fail and Athens might have to halt such withdrawals or prepare 
			to reintroduce a national currency. 
			
			  This added to an estimated 20 billion euros ($23 billion) that 
			Greeks have withdrawn since December, when it became clear that the 
			radical Syriza party of Tsipras was likely to win power in last 
			month's parliamentary elections. 
			 
			Faced with the risk of a chaotic bank run on Tuesday after a long 
			holiday weekend, Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis stressed that the 
			deal should calm savers. 
			 
			"It is quite clear that the reason why we had a deposit flight was 
			because every day, even before we were elected, Greeks were being 
			told that if we were elected and we stayed in power for more than 
			just a few days the ATMs will cease functioning," he told reporters 
			in Brussels on Friday. "Today's decision puts an end to this fear, 
			to the scaremongering." 
			 
			Seeking to calm Greeks worried about Monday's public holiday, a 
			source at the European Central Bank said after the Brussels deal 
			that capital controls were out of the question. 
			 
			Last month's election of Syriza on promises to reverse austerity 
			policies dictated by Greece's EU/IMF bailout program raised huge 
			expectations among the public. 
			 
			But under Friday's deal with euro zone finance ministers, Athens 
			agreed to an extension of the bailout it had promised to scrap, and 
			accepted oversight by the hated "troika" of officials from the 
			European Commission, European Central Bank and International 
			Monetary Fund, albeit under a new name. 
			 
			"We went through two months of agony, emptied the banks, to realize 
			we are still a debt colony," 54-year-old electrician Dimitris 
			Kanakis told Reuters. "The paymasters call the shots." 
			 
			However, the deal did open the possibility of lowering a target for 
			Greece's primary budget surplus, which excludes debt repayments, 
			freeing up funds to ease what Tsipras calls the nation's 
			"humanitarian crisis". 
			
			  
			
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			Spokesman Sakellaridis acknowledged that the deal, which is 
			conditional on euro zone ministers accepting Greece's economic 
			reforms plans on Monday, was only a first step. He also admitted the 
			difficulty for a government which is less than a month old in 
			negotiating with heavyweight European ministers. 
			
			"These last three weeks were tough weeks for a new government which 
			-- let's not kid ourselves, we're not trying to fool anyone -- 
			hasn't got the relevant experience," he said. 
			 
			"The real battle begins now," he added. "It is a battle that will be 
			extremely critical for the course of the country over the next few 
			years." 
			 
			German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Greek politicians 
			used to being in opposition had to wake up to the demands of office. 
			 
			"Being in government is a date with reality, and reality is often 
			not as nice as a dream," the conservative veteran said, stressing 
			Athens would get no aid payments until its bailout program was 
			properly completed. "The Greeks certainly will have a difficult time 
			to explain the deal to their voters." 
			 
			Athens must now negotiate a long-term deal with the euro zone before 
			the extension runs out in the early summer. 
			 
			European Union officials said one reason Greece had to cut a deal 
			now and not delay was that confidential calculations showed the 
			banking system had risked running out of money when it reopens on 
			Tuesday. Extra emergency funding authorized by the ECB on Wednesday 
			would not have been compensated for this. 
			 
			Tsipras had called for a emergency summit of EU leaders on Sunday if 
			the finance ministers had failed to agree. However, this idea was 
			rejected by European Council President Donald Tusk, increasing 
			pressure for a deal before the banks reopened. 
			
			
			  
			
			 
			 
			Sources close to the talks said Greece's creditors had lost 
			confidence in Varoufakis and preferred to deal directly with 
			Tsipras. Merkel, who had her first long conversation with Tsipras by 
			phone on Thursday, had been instrumental in ensuring a deal was 
			done, overcoming some resistance from Schaeuble who had taken a hard 
			line from the outset. 
			 
			($1 = 0.8789 euros) 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Karolina Tagaris, Renee Maltezou and Jan 
			Stupczewski; Writing by David Stamp; Editing by Ruth Pitchford) 
			
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