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 Europe determined to prevent any bank collapse 
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, welcomes Britain’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown before a crisis summit at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Sunday, Oct. 12. (AP)

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Europe determined to prevent any bank collapse

PARIS -- European governments will protect any major financial institution from collapsing and will recapitalize failing banks, according to a draft joint statement prepared at a summit here Sunday.

“Governments remain committed to avoid any failure of systemically relevant institutions, through appropriate means including recapitalization,” said the statement seen by AFP at the summit in the Elysee Palace in Paris.

“In doing so, we will be watchful regarding the interest of taxpayers and ensure that existing shareholders and management bear due consequences of the intervention,” it continued, in remarks still under discussion.

“Emergency recapitalization of a given institution shall be followed by an appropriate restructuring plan,” it said.

Earlier, French President Nicolas Sarkozy told reporters the meeting would come up with an “ambitious and coordinated plan” to tackle the crisis, which spread from the United States more than a year ago but hit fever pitch in recent weeks.

Officials suggested action rather than rhetoric could emerge from a gathering that involved the leaders of Britain and the 15 countries of the euro currency zone as well as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet.

“If market confidence is not restored this weekend, it’s game over,” said Marco Annunziata, chief economist for UniCredit, an Italian bank which is among many whose shares have been hurt in panic-stricken stock markets.

The American Standard & Poor’s 500 index tumbled more than 18 percent last week, its worst weekly fall on record. European stocks plunged 22 percent and Tokyo’s Nikkei crashed 24 percent.

Money markets, less visible to the public, are essentially on life support and dependent on regular, massive injections of emergency liquidity from central banks across the globe because banks themselves will not lend to each other as they used to.

The Paris meeting was hastily arranged by Sarkozy on the heels of a G7 summit of rich nations in Washington that offered no concrete, collective action but promised to do whatever was needed to unfreeze credit markets.

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