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German Chancellor: Yeah, We're Getting Pretty Fed up With Greece
Demonstrators in mock Nazi garb ride in a vehicle in Athens during a demonstration against the vist of the German Chancellor Angela Merkel on October 9, 2012. Athens went into security lockdown for a landmark visit by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, an austerity hate figure in Greece whose arrival will be greeted by union and opposition party protests. Thousands of police fanned out across the capital, creating a large safety zone for Merkel's meetings with Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and President Carolos Papoulias in which all gatherings and protests have been banned. AFP PHOTO / MAX GYSELINCKMAX GYSELINCK/AFP/GettyImages ORG XMIT:

German Chancellor: Yeah, We're Getting Pretty Fed up With Greece

"A lot of what the Greek leadership has promised wasn't lived up to."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel (Getty)

BERLIN (TheBlaze/AP) -- Chancellor Angela Merkel said she understands the frustration felt by many Germans over the repeated bailout programs for debt-ridden Greece, but insisted they are in her country's self-interest because they help stabilize the eurozone as a whole.

Merkel's comments came a day after Germany's parliament voted in favor of granting Greece more lenient terms on its bailout program, clearing a necessary hurdle for disbursing a €44 billion ($57 billion) rescue loan payment in December.

"I obviously feel many citizens' skepticism, and partly understand it, because Greece has often disappointed its partners in the past," Merkel told Sunday tabloid Bild am Sonntag in an interview released Saturday. "A lot of what the Greek leadership has promised wasn't lived up to."

The new Greek government, however, "finally" shows the necessary resolve "to change the country, to create modern structures," she said.

A German poll published Friday showed that 46 percent of 1,300 people polled favored letting Greece go bankrupt, only 43 percent thought Greece should receive further rescue loans. A total of 69 percent of those surveyed for public broadcaster ZDF thought that Greece itself hasn't done enough to overcome the crisis. The ZDF poll's margin of error was 3 percent.

Overly indebted Greece, which is about to enter its sixth consecutive year of a deep recession that has pushed unemployment up to 25 percent, is being kept afloat with rescue loans from its European partners and the International Monetary Fund in return for implementing harsh budget cuts and structural reforms.

"For the large majority of Greeks this upheaval comes with great sacrifices, especially the poor in Greece go through very hard times," Merkel told the newspaper.

The chancellor added that assisting Greece was "in Germany's interest" because it helps stabilize the 17-nation eurozone on which her nation's prosperity depends.

"I will continue to do what is best for Germany and Europe and what keeps the financial consequences as little as possible and does not expose us to unacceptable risks," she said.

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Featured image courtesy Getty Images.

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