SHOWS: PARIS, FRANCE (JULY 6, 2015) (EUROPE 1 - ACCESS ALL) 1. (SOUNDBITE) (French) FRENCH FINANCE MINISTER, MICHEL SAPIN, SAYING: “I told you — and I wasn’t the only one to say it — that the ‘No’ entailed a considerable risk for Greece. In this risk for Greece, there is the risk for an exit from the euro. But there is no automatism, in the same way that the vote doesn’t mean that Greece automatically stays in the euro. What will allow us to know if it stays or if it leaves, is the quality of negotiations that will open. (RADIO JOURNALIST SAYING: Ah, they will open? When?) Obviously. The dialogue is already open, what have I just said? I have just said and that is the respect we owe to the Greek vote that it’s up to Greece, up to the Greek Prime Minister to make proposals. You asked me what type of proposals — we worked all of last week, I already told you last week, we worked, the French President, myself with Mr. Juncker, with the President of the Eurogroup, with the European Central Bank, with the Greeks, we worked on a proposal which was a viable and durable proposal. (RADIO JOURNALIST SAYING: One which was rejected). No, that one wasn’t rejected as is, what the people rejected was a previous proposal. So there is a basis of a dialogue on the table but it is up to Greece to show us that it is taking this dialogue seriously and that it knows that it can stay in the euro but that decisions must be taken.” 2. (SOUNDBITE) (French) FRENCH FINANCE MINISTER, MICHEL SAPIN, SAYING: “The European Central Bank will do what is needed, what it must in complete independence. There is a level of liquidity today, this level of liquidity (to Greece) cannot be reduced.”