Thursday, June 21, 2012

No fear: Merkel to watch Germany-Greece game

President Barack Obama, left, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, and China's President Hu Jintao chat while waiting for other leaders to come to the stage to pose for the family photo of the G-20 Summit in Los Cabos, Mexico, Monday, June 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Leighton)

President Barack Obama, left, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, and China's President Hu Jintao chat while waiting for other leaders to come to the stage to pose for the family photo of the G-20 Summit in Los Cabos, Mexico, Monday, June 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Leighton)

FILE - In this July 3, 2010 file photo German Chancellor Angela Merkel celebrates next to South African President Jacob Zuma, left, after Germany's Thomas Mueller scored a goal during the World Cup quarterfinal soccer match between Argentina and Germany at the Green Point stadium in Cape Town, South Africa. Merkel will travel to Germany's European Championship quarterfinal match against Greece for a game that brings together nations at opposite ends of Europe's debt crisis, the German government said Wednesday, June 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer, File)

(AP) ? Chancellor Angela Merkel will travel to see Germany's European Championship quarterfinal match against Greece ? a game that brings together nations at opposite ends of Europe's debt crisis.

She says she hopes the match will be "very fair."

Germany, Europe's biggest economy, has been a major contributor to international bailouts for Greece and was instrumental in demanding structural reforms and hugely unpopular spending cuts in return. Merkel is not a popular figure for Greeks, to say the least.

Merkel can go to Friday's match in Gdansk, Poland, because the Italian government moved up a meeting in Rome with the Italian, French and Spanish leaders that originally was supposed to end as the match started.

The presence of Merkel could add extra political spice to Friday's encounter ? though team officials on both sides have been at pains to stress that it is purely a sporting event.

It wasn't clear whether Merkel will meet any Greek officials at the match. New Greece Prime Minister Antonis Samaras was sworn in only Wednesday, three days after Greek elections.

Merkel said she had congratulated Samaras "and I would be glad if he came to Gdansk too; whether he can arrange that, he will have to say himself ? I can't say it for him."

"In any case, it will be a good sporting event, and I hope that it will be a very fair sporting event," Merkel told reporters in Berlin after meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

Merkel, who has frequently attended Germany matches over recent years, was invited to Gdansk by Poland's prime minister, Donald Tusk.

Merkel visited the Germany team at its hotel in Gdansk shortly before the tournament started.

"She seems to bring us luck," Germany midfielder Sami Khedira told reporters in Gdansk on Wednesday.

Coach Joachim Loew's German team beat Portugal, the Netherlands and Denmark in the first round.

The Netherlands' Rutte said he had congratulated Merkel on archrival Germany's performances so far.

"On Sunday, all of Holland crossed its fingers for Germany" against Denmark, he said. "Unfortunately, that didn't help our team ? but that's how it is in sport, and of course we wish Joachim Loew and his team success."

Germany, unlike neighboring France, has not said its officials would boycott matches in Ukraine to protest the treatment by authorities there of jailed opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko.

Merkel, however, didn't go to any of Germany's opening-round matches, which were played in Ukraine.

Associated Press

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