German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday
renewed her pledge to stabilize the eurozone, and her insistence that it will
be a step-by-step process, as she honored one of the currency's founders -
long-serving predecessor Helmut Kohl.
Merkel's comments, at an event marking the
30th anniversary of Kohl's rise to power, came hours after Germany's president
ratified the eurozone's permanent €500 billion ($645 billion) rescue fund. That
clears the way for it to start work next month.
Kohl was a driving force behind the euro
and remains an iconic figure in Merkel's conservative party. Bailing out
eurozone strugglers hasn't been popular in Germany and has caused particular
unease in parts of Merkel's center-right governing coalition.
Kohl's name is "inextricably
linked" with Europe's currency union, Merkel said, adding that he
recognized that "a common currency would make European integration
irreversible."
Merkel added that "the euro is far
more than a currency." But she also pointed to promises made when the euro
was introduced to justify her hard-nosed approach to the crisis - helping
struggling countries while insisting on deficit-cutting and economic reform
efforts in exchange.
"The promise of stability also was
linked with the introduction of the euro - we feel committed to this promise in
the German government," Merkel said.
"We will continue to do everything
necessary to develop the economic and currency union so that it is stabilized
permanently - so we are fighting the causes of the current government debt
crisis not with a single strike but with a sequence of measures."
Ratification in Germany, Europe's biggest
economy, of the permanent eurozone rescue fund was delayed for months by court
challenges, but the country's highest court cleared the way for it to go ahead
earlier this month.
At Thursday's event, Merkel presented Kohl
- the leader of West Germany and then reunited Germany from 1982 to 1998 - with
a new postage stamp bearing his image.
Kohl, now 82, said he wants to continue
helping work to further the "great aim" of European unity.
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