Summary

  • Greek voters have decisively rejected the terms of an international bailout in a referendum

  • The final count is 38.7% "Yes" and 61.3% "No"

  • Turnout in the referendum was 62.5%

  • A summit of eurozone heads of states has been called for Tuesday

  • All times BST (GMT+1)

  1. Varoufakis interviewpublished at 12.49

    In case you missed it, here is the Greek finance minister talking to the BBC's Katya Adler:

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  2. Varoufakis reaffirms quit threatpublished at 12.48

    Greek Finance Minister will quit if 'Yes' wins

    Yanis Varoufakis has underlined his promise to quit if Greece votes 'Yes'. 

    Asked if he would really resign if the outcome of the referendum was 'Yes', he told the German newspaper Bild: 

    Quote Message

    Absolutely. There will not be a majority for 'Yes'.

  3. 'Little evidence of a problem'published at 12:45

    email: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk

    Dave Ensor:

    My partner and I are on Tilos, a fairly quiet and isolated island, which we return to every other year. The only bank machine is giving plenty of money, locals are stoic, there is little evidence of problem. The pharmacy is "lighter" than in recent years, food and drink prices are similar to previous. One noticeable difference is reduced tourism, which makes locals appreciate tourism.

  4. 'No apocalypse yet'published at 12:40

    A contributor tweets

  5. Send us your commentspublished at 12:35

    WhatsApp us: +44 (0)7525 900971

    Ari Dio: Cyprus: 

    Greece should vote against the bailout. If they do and leave the euro, they will struggle to begin with but will recover much faster than they would if staying in the euro and voting yes.

  6. A Romanian perspective on austeritypublished at 12.30

    WhatsApp us: +44 (0) 7525900971

    I was born in the year communist Romania went bankrupt - 1982. The austerity that followed in order to pay the whole 20% of GDP of debt destroyed the country's economy, made the population poorer and isolated the country. The debt was paid until 1989. Only way out for Greece is vote Oxi-No.

    Bogdan in Bucharest, Romania

  7. Just like Scotland?published at 12.26

    Actor and writer tweets...

  8. A precedent for the eurozone?published at 12:22

    David George tweets...

  9. Add to the debatepublished at 12:18

    email: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk

    Sid Anning:

    If you borrow money, whether you are an individual or a country, at some point you have to pay it back, and if you default you have to pay the penalties. Greece has made its bed, it must now lie on it.

  10. Out of cash?published at 12:15

    The Telegraph's International Business Editor Ambrose Evans-Pritchard tweets...

  11. 'Greek voice'published at 12:09

    The former Greek prime minister, George Papandreou has said that it is better for Greece to remain in the Eurozone if it really wants to instigate reforms.

    After casting his ballot, Mr Papandreou said:

    Quote Message

    For the big changes, it is of strategic importance to stay in the hard-centre of the eurozone in order to conduct those big changes in the most effective way. The negotiation is not a dice in the hands of a government in a difficult position. It is the every day, continuous, consistent and systematic negotiation for Greece's voice to be heard - the Greek voice to be heard.

  12. 'Restrictions strangling Greek economy'published at 12:06

    More from the BBC's Economic Editor in Athens...

  13. Young Tsipraspublished at 12:00

    Buzzfeed's Jim Waterson has been tweeting pictures of Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in his younger days. 

  14. More queuespublished at 11:58

    Queue for an ATM in GreeceImage source, Reuters

    Another long ATM queue at a bank in Athens.

  15. Be free and votepublished at 11:54 British Summer Time 5 July 2015

    @MarieGatardL tweets...

  16. Send us your commentspublished at 11:51

    Email: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk

    Christophoros Papanicolaou:  

    I'd just like to comment that what this referendum is all about, is a vote of confidence for this government. Nothing more, nothing less. The question itself is completely void and in my view, the people are being divided for the sake of the cabinet's political future.

    Monday will be hellish anyway, no reason for triumphs no matter which campaign wins.

  17. Syriza 'should not stand aside'published at 11:50 British Summer Time 5 July 2015

    George Katrougalos, the Greek minister for Administrative Reforms, has told BBC Radio 5 Live that Syriza should not stand aside if they lose today's referendum.

    He said: "We would been disavowed in a very critical issue of our policy, but we have another mandate to break with the system of oligarchs.

    "So resigning would be, in my opinion - I cannot say what the prime minister will say - it would be like giving up this mandate."  

  18. A battle between hope and fearpublished at 11:44

    Julian Spooner tweets...

  19. The reason to votepublished at 11:43

    @pseudonio tweets...

  20. Voting in Volospublished at 11:43

    Voter outside polling station in VolosImage source, Stefan Reade
    Image caption,

    Entrance to polling station in Volos, Greece just now