CYPRUS: Eurozone, Russia near bailout compromise

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Europe and Russia are getting closer to a deal on how to involve Moscow in bailing out indebted Cyprus after Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev signaled willingness to help.
Medvedev was quoted as saying on Monday that Russia could provide support to Cyprus under certain conditions but the island itself and the European Union would have to take the biggest share in a potential bailout.
The help could come in the form of an extension to a 5-year 2.5 bln euro loan Moscow granted Nicosia in 2011.
Cyprus said earlier this month it had formally launched a request for a 5-year extension to repay that debt, a step that could take the immediate heat out of Nicosia's financial woes and that, according to a German government document, euro zone finance ministers support.
"We think the main burden to solve these problems should be taken on by Cyprus and the EU states," Medvedev told the German business daily Handelsblatt in an interview held on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
"But we are not refusing to help under certain conditions. The conditions must be agreed first. Before that, there can be no money from us," he added.
The Mediterranean island, waiting for a multi-billion euro bailout after heavy exposure to debt-crippled Greece, has had to contend with misgivings from lender states on how committed it is to fighting money laundering and why the island is a magnet for Russian money.
Cyprus offers the euro zone's lowest nominal corporate tax rate and has had close political ties with Russia for decades. Some politicians, especially in Germany, have accused Cyprus of being a hub for money laundering and a shadowy tax haven.
Last week, European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn told Reuters it would only be fair for Russia to share part of the burden over Cyprus.
"I would think that as there is significant economic and financial activity by Russia and especially by Russian citizens and businesses in Cyprus, it would be quite fair that Russia is making a contribution," Rehn said.
"We have had contacts with Russia but of course they take their own decisions in their own way," he added.
Medvedev said it was now important for the European Union to put clear demands to Cyprus.
"It would be better if nobody would lose anything. But most of all it is now necessary that the EU formulates its demands clearly on how the Cypriot economy should be cleaned up. Cyprus is more set than countries like Greece."
Cyprus, one of the smallest euro zone economies, applied for financial aid from the European Union and the IMF in June last year after its banks were hurt by an EU-sanctioned writedown of Greek debt held by private investors.
While European Central Bank board member Joerg Asmussen told Reuters last week Cyprus could derail the euro zone despite its small size, others still have doubt that a default in the country, with gross domestic product of just 0.2% of the euro zone's output, could unsettle the bloc as a whole.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is not yet convinced it can be seen as a systemic risk, which is a precondition for a bailout.
Preliminary estimates of a draft bailout deal put the bill at 10 bln euros for bank support. On that basis, its total bailout, including fiscal needs, could reach 17-17.5 bln euros, equivalent to the island's annual economic output.