|      Cypriots are expected to    descend in their thousands on Thursday on banks, which reopen with tight    controls imposed on transactions to prevent fleeing depositors from cleaning    out the vaults in a catastrophic bank run. The east Mediterranean    island fears a stampede at banks almost two weeks after they were shut by the    government as it negotiated a 10 billion euro ($12.78 billion) bailout    package with the European Union to escape    financial meltdown. The rescue deal is the    first in Europe's single currency zone to impose losses on bank depositors,    raising the prospect that savers will panic and scramble to get at their    cash. Authorities insist that    strict rules imposed to prevent a bank run will be temporary, but economists    say they will be difficult to lift as long as the economy is in crisis. On Wednesday night,    container trucks loaded with cash pulled up inside the compound of the central bank in the capital Nicosia to prepare for    the reopening, a Cyprus central bank source    said. A helicopter hovered overhead and police with rifles were stationed    around the compound. As in all countries that    use the euro, Cyprus's central bank supplies cash for its banks from the European Central Bank in Frankfurt. Officials have    promised that enough funds will be on hand to meet demand. The ECB did not    comment on reports it had sent extra cash to the island. Strict controls,    contained in a Finance Ministry decree, limit cash withdrawals to no more    than 300 euros per day, ban the cashing of cheques and bar businesses from    transferring money abroad unless they can show it is for imports. The island's central bank    will review all commercial transactions over 5,000 euros and scrutinize    transactions over 200,000 euros on an individual basis. People leaving Cyprus    can take only 3,000 euros with them. With just 860,000 people,    Cyprus has some 68 billion euros in its banks - a vastly outsized financial    system that attracted deposits from foreigners as an offshore haven but    foundered after investments in neighboring Greece went sour. The European Union and    International Monetary Fund concluded that Cyprus could not afford a rescue    unless it imposed losses on depositors, previously seen as anathema. "CYPRUS EURO" Cyprus's financial    difficulties have sent tremors through the already fragile single European    currency. The imposition of capital controls    has led economists to warn that a second-class "Cyprus euro" could    emerge, with funds trapped on the island less valuable than euros that can be    freely spent abroad. The authorities say they    can avoid that by lifting controls quickly. They have been imposed initially    for just four days. "The rationale is    that these measures will be reviewed on a daily basis, so if there is the    possibility of relaxing them we will," Yiangos Demetriou, head of    internal audit at the Central Bank, told state television. But many experts are    skeptical. A Reuters poll of economists this week showed 30 out of 46 said    the controls would last months, while 13 expected they would endure a matter    of weeks. Three said they could last years. "This is a typical    set of exchange control measures, more reminiscent of Latin America or    Africa," said Bob Lyddon, General Secretary of the international banking    association IBOS. "There is no way    these will only last seven days," he said. "These are permanent    controls until the economy recovers." The bailout deal,    hammered out in fraught overnight negotiations in Brussels on Monday, looks    set to push Cyprus deeper into an economic slump, shrink the banking sector    and cost thousands of jobs. The island's second    largest bank, Cyprus Popular Bank will be    closed and its guaranteed deposits of up to 100,000 euros transferred to the    biggest bank, Bank of Cyprus. Deposits of more than    100,000 euros at both banks, too big to enjoy a state guarantee, will be    frozen, and some of those funds will be exchanged for shares issued by the    banks to recapitalize them. The big depositors will    lose money, but the authorities say deposits up to 100,000 euros will be    protected, a reversal from an earlier plan that would have hit small    depositors as well but was vetoed by Cyprus's parliament last week. European leaders said the    bailout deal averted a chaotic national bankruptcy that might have forced    Cyprus out of the euro. Many Cypriots say the deal was foisted upon them by    Cyprus's partners in the 17-nation euro zone, and some have taken to the    streets to vent their frustration. On Wednesday, some 2,500    people rallied outside the offices of conservative President Nicos    Anastasiades, waving banners and flags. They chanted: "I'll pay nothing;    I owe nothing." For now, residents say    they are confused and worried by the capital controls, and wonder how they    will affect daily life. A 42-year-old Romanian    hotel maid, who gave her name as Maria, said she was worried she would not be    able to cash her pay cheque due on Friday. The hotel, she said, was unable to    pay staff in cash because most guests paid by credit card. "What shall I    do?" she asked. "Hold up the cheque and look at it?"  |    
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