News about Greece 8/5/95
Copyright 1995 Agence France Presse
Agence France Presse
May 08, 1995
SECTION: Informations Generales
LENGTH: 373 words
HEADLINE: Turquie- Grece -Tourisme
BYLINE: parer des attentats contre le
BODY:
tourisme turc
ANKARA, 8 mai (AFP) - Trois personnes qui s'appretaient a perpetrer des
attentats contre des objectifs touristiques au nom du PKK ont ete arretees lors
d'operations policieres a Izmir, sur la mer Egee (ouest), a annonce lundi le
prefet de police de cette ville, Kemal Yazicioglu.
Neuf pains de dynamite et des produits chimiques servant a la fabrication
d'explosifs ont ete saisis lors de ces operations qui etaient menees depuis une
quarantaine de jours a Izmir, a indique M. Yazicioglu, cite par l'agence turque
Anatolie, au cours d'une conference de presse.
L'une des personnes arretees, Mehmet Kavak, alias "Ciya", 28 ans, a affirme
lors de cette conference de presse "qu'il avait ete forme politiquement et
militairement" en Grece, pendant deux mois, dans un camp (du Parti des
Travailleurs du Kurdistan, PKK, separatiste) situe dans une zone forestiere, a
deux heures et demie d'Athenes.
Mehmet Kavak affirme s'etre rendu en janvier 1995 en Grece. Selon lui, "une
trentaine d'autres personnes ont egalement ete formees" dans ce camp pour la
fabrication d'explosifs et elles sont plus tard rentrees en Turquie pour
"perpetrer des attentats a la bombe" dans des zones touristiques.
L'ete dernier, la Turquie avait accuse la Grece, d'apres les "aveux" d'un
groupe de militants du PKK arretes a Istanbul, "d'avoir forme" des militants du
PKK pour des attentats contre des objectifs economiques, militaires et
touristiques en Turquie, ce qui avait ete rejete par la Grece.
En 1994, trois touristes etrangers --une Tunisienne, un Espagnol et une
Britannique-- avaient ete tues et 39 autres personnes, dont 22 etrangers,
blessees, dans quatre attentats a la bombe a Istanbul et dans les stations
balneaires de Fethiye et de Marmaris sur la Mediterranee (sud-ouest).
Copyright 1995 The British Broadcasting Corporation
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts
May 8, 1995, Monday
SECTION: Part 2 Central Europe and the Balkans; BALKANS; TURKEY; EE/2297/B
LENGTH: 285 words
HEADLINE: RELATIONS WITH GREECE;
Premier criticizes Greece over minister clash
SOURCE: Source: TRT TV, Ankara, in Turkish 1700 gmt 6 May 95
BODY:
Prime Minister Tansu Ciller has told a crowd in Edirne that the attack on
State Minister Aktuna in Greece exemplifies that country's intolerance while
Turkey is "a great fighter for democracy" . The following are excerpts from a
report by Turkish TV:
[Announcer] Prime Minister Tansu Ciller has said that Turkey is a great
country teaching the world lessons in democracy as well as human rights ...
Ciller left Ankara for Istanbul around noon today [6th May]. She then flew by
helicopter to Edirne ... During her public address in Edirne, Ciller also
referred to the attack against Aktuna in Greece.
[Ciller] We have something to say. We sent our minister there as a gesture of
friendship. There is no tolerance there. I am calling on those who hoisted the
terrorist flag - the terrorist rag - next to their own: You are tarnishing your
own flag. Let me clearly state the following: This country is great and it will
remain great. Turkey is a fighter for democracy. This is what I have to say to
our neighbours who have declared themselves the champions of democracy: Where is
your tolerance? Where is your democracy? Look at our Turkish soldiers in order
to learn a lesson. Look at the Turkish soldiers in northern Iraq who taught
everyone a lesson in human rights. They returned from war without having harmed
a single civilian or child. You cannot even respect a person who went to visit
you as a guest. Let the world be the judge of the difference between these two
attitudes.
[Announcer] Ciller said that with the north Iraq operation, the Turkish Armed
Forces taught the world lessons in human rights as well as democracy. Meanwhile,
the citizens chanted anti-Greek slogans...
Copyright 1995 The British Broadcasting Corporation
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts
May 8, 1995, Monday
SECTION: Part 2 Central Europe and the Balkans; BALKANS; TURKEY; EE/2297/B
LENGTH: 270 words
HEADLINE: RELATIONS WITH GREECE;
State Minister Aktuna accuses Greeks of sympathizing with PKK
SOURCE: Source: TRT TV, Ankara, in Turkish 2010 gmt 4 May 95
BODY:
State Minister Yildirim Aktuna has returned from Western Thrace in Greece,
where he sustained slight injuries in an attack, and has reported that during
his visit a Kurdistan Workers'Party declaration was posted on the door of the
Turkish consulate by a Greek policeman. This visit, he concluded has "cut open a
boil and exposed the pus inside it" . The following is the text of a report by
Turkish TV:
State Minister Yildirim Aktuna, who was attacked by some Greek fanatics
during his tour of Western Thrace, has returned to Turkey. Aktuna arrived in
Turkey overland and then flew by helicopter to Ataturk airport in Istanbul,
where he held a news conference.
Aktuna said that the Greek police and the assailants had cooperated during
the hideous attack on him. Pointing out that no Greek government official called
him after the attack, Aktuna remarked that not only does this behaviour not
correspond with diplomacy, it is also not good manners. There were some 200-300
policemen in the square, Aktuna said, adding that he observed Greek as well as
PKK [Kurdistan Workers'Party] flags in the crowd. Noting that a PKK declaration
was posted on the door of the Turkish consulate by a Greek policeman, Aktuna
said that this visit had cut open a boil and exposed the pus inside it.
Aktuna said that it has become clear that the Greek press was controlled by
the government and that Greece was far behind Turkey with regard to democracy
and human rights. Intensive pressure is being applied on Turks in Western
Thrace, Aktuna stressed, adding that Turkey could not remain indifferent to this
situation.
Copyright 1995 Reuters, Limited
May 8, 1995, Monday, BC cycle
SECTION: Money Report. Bonds Capital Market.
LENGTH: 229 words
HEADLINE: GREEK FINMIN WANTS TO KEEP AUSTERITY, CUT SPENDING
DATELINE: ATHENS, MAY 8
BODY:
Greek Finance Minister Alexandros Papadopoulos pledged the socialist
government would stick to its tight fiscal and anti-inflation policies and
called for cuts in the country's sprawling public sector.
"First and foremost we have to rid ourselves of the sense that the tight
anti-inflationary policy is transient," Papadopoulos told a financial seminar
held by the Foundation for Economic and Industrial Research (IOBE).
"There is a belief that our anti-inflationary policy, a part of which is the
government's tough fiscal policy, is just a parenthesis in order to tidy up the
current economic crisis, and it will later sink without trace," Papadopoulos
said.
Dumping the government's austerity policies would be "a catastrophic utopia,"
he said.
"The only viable policy for development and full employment is one that
respects, at every step, persistence in curbing inflation through fiscal and
incomes policy," Papadopoulos said.
State spending should be reduced and the costly public sector cut back in
order to meet targets set in the government's plan to align with other European
economies, Papadopoulos said.
"This is a major and probably painful issue ... but we no longer have room to
move," he said.
"It is the ultimate in short-sightedness to save 400 jobs today, sacrificing
4,000 tomorrow. "
--Claire Springett, Athens Newsroom +301 3311813-4
Copyright 1995 Reuters, Limited
May 8, 1995, Monday, BC cycle
SECTION: Money Report. Bonds Capital Market.
LENGTH: 112 words
HEADLINE: GREEK C'BANK TO CUT FORCED DEPOS OVER TWO YRS-GOV
DATELINE: ATHENS, MAY 8
BODY:
Greek commercial banks' mandatory deposits at the central bank will drop to
low European Union levels in the next two years, financial newspapers quoted
Bank of Greece governor Lucas Papademos as saying.
The central bank's plan to gradually reduce the proportion of drachma
deposits, now at nine percent, would not begin in the immediate future despite a
cut in mandatory foreign exchange deposits decided last month, Papademos was
quoted as saying.
Papademos was taking part in a round-table discussion at a symposium on the
financial system held by the Institute for Economic and Industrial Research on
Friday.
-- Claire Springett, Athens Newsroom +301 3311813-4
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