ELEFSINA, Greece/ATHENS (Reuters) - Georgia Golemi, a pharmacy owner, plans to oppose international bailout terms in a Greek referendum on Sunday, while Michalis Fioravantes, a state-funded teacher, says he will vote for them.
Their stances, counterintuitive in the bitter debate over market reforms raging between Greece and its creditors, show how unpredictable the vote is likely to be in a country where financial disintegration has blurred traditional distinctions.
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