Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has made a defiant speech as cash withdrawal limits begin to bite for Greek bank customers. Mr Tsipras promised Greeks their pensions and wages would be safe.
Before his speech he put new proposals to eurozone partners, accepting most of what was on the table before talks collapsed, but with conditions. But eurozone finance ministers later said there were "no grounds for further talks at this point".
Dutch Finance Minster Jeroen Dijsselbloem replied to Mr Tsipras's proposals, saying a new bailout could only be discussed "after and on the basis of the outcome of" a referendum Mr Tsipras has called for Sunday.
Greeks will be asked to accept or reject proposals made by creditors last week, with Mr Tsipras urging a "No" vote to strengthen Greece's hand in negotiations.
Dutch Finance Minster Jeroen Dijsselbloem replied to Mr Tsipras's proposals, saying a new bailout could only be discussed "after and on the basis of the outcome of" a referendum Mr Tsipras has called for Sunday.
Greeks will be asked to accept or reject proposals made by creditors last week, with Mr Tsipras urging a "No" vote to strengthen Greece's hand in negotiations.
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis told Greek TV that the government would aim to secure a deal with creditors on Monday, with capital controls being lifted soon after.
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Mr Tsipras's latest offer to creditors is tied explicitly to agreement on a request for a third bailout from the eurozone's bailout fund lasting two years and amounting to €29.1bn.
In his address on Wednesday Mr Tsipras thanked Greeks for their "calm" in the face of bank closures and said their salaries and pensions would "not be lost".
He angrily denied he had a secret plan to take Greece out of the euro, calling those who accused him of this "liars".
Greek banks did not open this week after the ECB froze their liquidity lifeline, and on Wednesday decided to keep the emergency funding at the same level.
The ECB did not decide to demand more collateral from Greek banks as some had speculated it might. Withdrawals from cash machines are capped at just €60 a day and long queues have been forming outside banks.
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Many pensioners had waited outside banks from before dawn, only to be told to return on Thursday or Friday, AP reports. Some pensioners were told their pensions had not yet been deposited.
"It's very bad,'' said Popi Stavrakaki, 68. "I'm afraid it will be worse soon. I have no idea why this is happening."
Close to 300 pensioners marched on the Bank of Greece in Athens after being given only a small sum from banks in the morning instead of the entire €120.
Close to 300 pensioners marched on the Bank of Greece in Athens after being given only a small sum from banks in the morning instead of the entire €120.
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