Greece will try again Tuesday to form a government, aiming for a technocrat solution to resolve a crisis which risks forcing it into new elections and out of the eurozone. Leaders from all political parties, except the far right, which won seats in inconclusive polls on May 6 will meet at 1100 GMT Tuesday in a last-gasp effort to get the country "out of a dead end," according to Socialist Pasok party head Evangelos Venizelos. At the general election, Greek voters displayed their firm opposition to the rough austerity measures imposed by the country's EU creditors in return for multi-billion euro bailout loans. Venizelos, speaking Monday after talks with President Carolos Papoulias and leaders of the conservative New Democracy and radical Democratic Left, said Tuesday's meeting would try to form a government of "distinguished and non-political figures." The talks are seen as the last chance for Greece to resolve the crisis, amid increasing pressure from its eurozone partners to end two years of tortuous and dangerous instability in the 17-nation bloc. "Everyone must take their responsibilities ... our efforts continue tomorrow," said Antonis Samaras of New Democracy. "Our mandate all together is to build a government," he added. Democratic Left head Fotis Kouvelis, who had earlier Monday said there was no chance of a deal if the radical left Syriza party was not included, indicated he would go to Tuesday's meeting but poured cold water on the technocrat option. "I told the President ... that a government formed by technocrats and personalities means the defeat of politics. I expressed that I am against it." The latest Greek twist coincided with a eurozone finance ministers meeting in Brussels Monday where officials insisted Greece must accept the bailout in full or face the consequences, a likely exit from the 17-nation bloc. Nevertheless leading eurozone powerbroker Jean-Claude Juncker lashed out at "propaganda" suggesting that politically-paralysed Greece would now exit the troubled currency. "I don't envisage, not even for one second, Greece leaving," the head of the Eurogroup said after the Brussels talks Germany, the eurozone's paymaster, stressed the importance of forming a government in Athens while European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso hoped Greece could stay in the eurozone, while insisting it must meet its belt-tightening commitments. Markets were rattled Monday by the growing uncertainty over Greece's future in the eurozone, with investors worried by the prospect of even greater and drawn-out uncertainty if new polls were to be called. European stock markets suffered heavy losses, with Athens down 4.56 percent, while Wall Street also lost ground on the view that Greece is slipping out of the eurozone with potentially disastrous consequences far and wide. Meanwhile Moody's slashed its credit ratings by up to four notches for 26 Italian banks, including UniCredit and Intesa Sanpaolo, citing their vulnerability to Italy's recession and more trouble in the eurozone. Financial markets were set for another difficult day Tuesday over a crisis which some fear could also snag Spain and Italy after bringing down Greece, Ireland and Portugal. New Democracy and Pasok backed the 240 billion euro ($310 billion) EU and International Monetary Fund debt deal agreed last year and approved by parliament as part of the outgoing technocrat government led by Lucas Papademos. Monday's developments seem like an attempted return to that solution which at least proved stable long enough to get the debt deal through but the political landscape is now very different. Syriza has capitalised on a groundswell of frustration in Europe with governments which put austerity before growth and only last week, Socialist Francois Hollande ousted French President Nicolas Sarkozy in polls which largely turned on his pledge for change. For Greeks, the situation is difficult and confusing. Many want to remain in the eurozone for all the benefits it brings but strongly oppose the tough EU-IMF austerity measures as the country languishes in recession for a fifth year. Greece wants it both ways, "to remain in the eurozone but not have the loan agreement, said unemployed Velisarios. "That is what the majority wants ... (but) of course, something like that can't happen," he said. For Venizelos, a former finance minister, with the country in "such a dead end," the technocrat option seemed the least worst solution.