a route of returning to the founding principles of democracy and solidarity in europe. very much like what the prime minister said tease are the questions that i allot of people here are asking as well. what s going to happen tomorrow? what will the next day bring? because this referendum comes at a time that finds greece very poll larized between the two sides, the yes and the no vote. the last exit polls that we have seen bring the two sides neck and neck. what is at stake here is greece s position in the eurozone no matter what the phrasing the question. the questions are if the yes vote wins what will the prime minister do next. he s strongly supported the no count. the finance minister says he will step at any down. what it is clear some sort of talks in brussels need to continue because the banks in
authorities boiled this vote down to a yes or no. a single word to decide. but the wording on that critical ballot is something quite different, very hard to decipher. lisa suarez has a copy of the question and the responses from greeks. the greek people are preparing to have their say and what is a referendum that will really shape the future of their country, but do they understand the question that is being put to them? i have it here in english and i m going to read it out to you. it reads the greek people are asked to decide with their vote whether to accept the outline of the agreement submitted by the european union, the european central bank, and the international monetary fund at the euro group of 25-06-15 and is made up of two parts which couldn t city tut their unified proposals. the first document is attached entitled reforms for the completion of the current program and beyond.
athens. what s it looking like there? people are turning out to big numbers. this school has been turned into a polling station. we expect the turnout is going to be very high. the question of this referendum comes at such a critical time and although a lot of people appear to still be confused about the exact phrasing most of them seem to be voting for a no to aw austerity or a yes to europe. the prime minister said this vote symbolizes a vote for democracy. let s take a listen. translator: today, democracy wins over fear. our decisiveness cinched the win. the propaganda of fear. i m certain from tomorrow we will have opened a path for all the people of europe.
you this hour. starting in greece. later today we expect to know whether the greeks have accepted or reject a bailout deal to prevent the country s collapse. the economy at least. voters less than seven hours to decide on the landmark referendum. european leaders say a no vote would force greece out of the ooirns eurozone. tunisia declares a state of emergency in the wake of a terror attack over a week ago. the attack killed mostly tourists. coalition forces carried out 16 air strikes on isis targets on saturday in raqqa, syria. military officials say they destroyed some of the groups vital structures and transit routes. a day after the first - noticeable sign of progress in the iran nuclear talks, the u.s. secretary of state and iran s
this was a very important event for me. i would be sharing my experience how to sleep and especially also how to trust this airplane when you sleep. as a single pilot, normally you are overcoming this feeling and second you have to make sure that you trust the airplane when you start to sleep because the only way to go. well, certainly impulse 2 broke the record and the distance for the solar-powered journey. news day is just ahead. for everyone else our coverage of the greek referendum continues next.