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Eight days in the Greek debt crisis

A 50 euro banknote is attached to a Greek flag with stickers reading "Yes to Greece, yes to Europe" on July 3, 2015 in central Athens, during a rally supporting a "Yes" vote on the upcoming Greek referendum on its bailout terms

Greece and the entire eurozone are in limbo as the country gets set for a referendum on bailout conditions on Sunday.

Greece was officially declared in default on Friday by the European Financial Stability Facility, which holds 144.6 billion euros ($160 billion) of Greek loans.

Athens has just missed an IMF loan payment deadline, the first time that has happened to an industrialised country. If it defaults on a July 20 payment to the ECB, Greece might have to withdraw from the 19-nation eurozone.

Here is a look at recent financial and political drama in Greece.

Saturday, June 27: Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras calls a referendum on whether or not to accept the terms of the latest round of bailout aid. "The people must decide free of any blackmail," he tells the nation at 1:00 am local time (2200 GMT).

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Eurozone finance ministers decide to let a Greek rescue plan expire on June 30, effectively ending talks with Athens on more aid. Greeks start withdrawing large sums of money from ATM cash machines.

Sunday, June 28: The European Central Bank (ECB) says it will maintain an emergency cash lifeline to Greece but not increase its level, raising the risk of a liquidity crunch.

Greek officials enact capital controls that limit ATM withdrawals by Greeks to 60 euros ($65) per day and close banks until July 7.

Pensioners without bank cards can withdraw money from banks however, and foreign tourists are not subjected to the limit.

Monday, June 29: European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker says he feels "betrayed" by the Greek actions. Tsipras publicly doubts Juncker's "sincerity" as relations between the two sides hit a new low.

Tuesday, June 30: Tsipras seeks a 30-billion-euro deal with the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) to cover state financing needs and restructure Greece's crushing debt.

At midnight, Greece misses the deadline to repay 1.5 million euros in loans to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Wednesday, July 1: German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble presses Athens to "clarify its position on what it wants."

Thursday, July 2: Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis says he will resign if voters do not back the government on Sunday. It has urged voters to reject the terms of a rescue package that has already expired but which could be the basis for future talks. Tsipras says this will strengthen Greece's position.

The IMF estimates that Greece needs 50 billion euros over the next three years, including 36 billion euros more from EU lenders, and debt relief to stabilise its finances.

Friday, July 3: The EFSF declares "an event of default by Greece" on debt owed to the facility. It has nonetheless "decided not to request immediate repayment of its loans nor to waive its right to action," a statement says.

Tsipras calls for a 30 percent cut of the Greek debt and a 20-year grace period for the rest. Total Greek debt is 323 billion euros, or nearly 180 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP).

European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker says Greece's negotiating position with creditors would be "dramatically weakened" in the event of a "No" vote in the referendum.

Sunday, July 5: Scheduled Greek referendum on terms of the previous bailout.

Tsipras has called it "a time of responsibility and democracy meant to the silence the sirens of destruction."