UK 'not bailing Greece out' for second time

Britain has not been asked to take part in any new European Union bailout of Greece, Downing Street said today.

Chancellor George Osborne will make clear at a meeting of EU finance ministers in Luxembourg today that the UK does not want to be part of any new aid package for the Greek economy.

Downing Street said proposals drawn up last night by the 17 eurozone countries do not involve Britain.

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Prime Minister David Cameron's official spokesman said: "There is no proposal on the table which would involve us. The arrangements in place for Greece are arrangements that involved eurozone countries, and we weren't involved in those arrangements."

Asked if any specific request for help was directed to the UK, the spokesman replied: "No there hasn't."

Mr Cameron will discuss the Athens situation with European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso at a meeting at 10 Downing Street this afternoon but is not expected to make any offer of help.

The issue is also expected to be raised at Thursday's European Council summit in Brussels, when all 27 EU members will look at the bloc budget for the coming years.

Britain's only potential contribution to bailing out Greece again now comes from its shareholding in the IMF, in the form of loan guarantees which would only be called in if Greece defaults.

The UK did not contribute to the original 110 billion euro (96.5 billion) deal a year ago, put together by eurozone countries to help save one of their own.

With the slow pace of deficit reduction in Greece and the economic crisis far worse than even pessimists feared, a second bailout is now considered inevitable. Some observers predict default.

London mayor Boris Johnson said this morning that Greece should be allowed to default on its debt and leave the euro. He insisted membership of the single currency had "exacerbated" Greece's woes.

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Germany and France have signalled that there is no reason for London to pay a share of a repeat bailout, likely to be finalised within weeks and for a similar sum as the first.

At today's talks in Luxembourg, Mr Osborne is expected to say that the issue is one for the eurozone alone.

Foreign Secretary William Hague is also in Luxembourg at a separate meeting of EU foreign ministers.