People involved in the talks said the package would also include incentives for private holders of Greek debt voluntarily to extend Athens’ repayment schedule, as well as another round of austerity measures.
Eurozone countries and the International  Monetary Fund would then need to lend an additional €30bn-€35bn on top  of the €110bn already promised as part of the bail-out programme agreed  last year.
Officials warned, however, that almost every element of  the new package faced significant opposition from at least one of the  governments and institutions involved in the current negotiations and a  deal could still unravel. 
In the latest setback, the Greek government failed on Friday to  win cross-party agreement on the new austerity measures, which European  Union lenders have insisted is a prerequisite to another bail-out. 
In  addition, the European Central Bank remains opposed to any  restructuring of Greek debt that could be considered a “credit event” – a  change in terms that could technically be ruled a default. 
One  senior European official involved in the talks, however, said ECB  objections could be overcome if the rescheduling was structured  properly. 
Despite the hurdles, pressure is building to have a deal done  within three weeks because of an IMF threat to withhold its portion of  June’s €12bn bail-out payment unless Athens can show it can meet all its  financing requirements for the next 12 months. 
Officials think  Greece will be unable to return to the financial markets to raise money  on its own in March – as originally planned in the current €110bn  package – meaning that the IMF is now forbidden from distributing any  additional cash. Without the IMF funds, eurozone governments would  either be forced to fill the gap or Athens could default. 
To bring the IMF back in, the new deal must be reached by a scheduled meeting of EU finance ministers on June 20. 
By Peter Spiegel taken from http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/eb91ba84-8a27-11e0-beff-00144feab49a.html#axzz1NqFswIGL
 
 
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