Cyprus is locked in "hard negotiations" with a troika of lenders to save the Eurozone member's banking system and economy in general from ruin.
The European Union has
given Nicosia until Monday to raise 5.8 billion euros ($7.47 billion) to unlock loans worth 10 billion euros or face being choked from European Central Bank emergency funding in a move that would bankrupt the island.
"In a few hours we will be called upon to take the big decisions and reply to the hard dilemmas," government spokesman Christos Stylianides said in a statement at a news conference, as the government raced to
secure a bailout to meet the Monday deadline for a deal.
"The House of Representatives will soon be called upon to take the big decisions. Undoubtedly, there will also be painful aspects in any decision taken, but the country must be saved," he said.
Stylianides was referring to an emergency session of Parliament expected later on Friday to examine a raft of eight bills aimed at raising billions of dollars to secure a vital EU-IMF bailout.
"The next few hours will determine the future of this country. We must all assume our responsibility," Stylianides said.
EU sources have said the bloc is ready to eject Cyprus from the Eurozone to prevent contagion of
other debt-hit members such as Greece, Spain and Italy.
with PTI inputs