Browse through our Interesting Nodes on the Informatics & Computing Business in Greece Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923) Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923)
HR-Net - Hellenic Resources Network Compact version
Today's Suggestion
Read The "Macedonian Question" (by Maria Nystazopoulou-Pelekidou)
HomeAbout HR-NetNewsWeb SitesDocumentsOnline HelpUsage InformationContact us
Tuesday, 26 November 2024
 
News
  Latest News (All)
     From Greece
     From Cyprus
     From Europe
     From Balkans
     From Turkey
     From USA
  Announcements
  World Press
  News Archives
Web Sites
  Hosted
  Mirrored
  Interesting Nodes
Documents
  Special Topics
  Treaties, Conventions
  Constitutions
  U.S. Agencies
  Cyprus Problem
  Other
Services
  Personal NewsPaper
  Greek Fonts
  Tools
  F.A.Q.
 

Athens News Agency: News in English, 97-02-11

Athens News Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Athens News Agency at <http://www.forthnet.gr/ape>


NEWS IN ENGLISH

Athens, Greece, 11/02/1997 (ANA)

MAIN HEADLINES

  • British foreign minister fears war over Cyprus
  • EU Commission sees positive results in Greek economy
  • Open Skies Treaty trial flights over Larisa
  • State film award winners
  • Olympic Airways, Hertz offers special fly-drive deal
  • Macedonia-Thrace Bank enters EU investment programme

    NEWS IN DETAIL

    British foreign minister fears war over Cyprus

    British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind warned early this morning that there was a serious possibility of Greece and Turkey going to war over Cyprus.

    Mr Rifkind, speaking on BBC Radio, also accused Athens and Ankara of lacking the political will to find a solution.

    "When relations are already bad and tense and difficult and both sides appear to be looking for an excuse to make them worse, that is pretty grim, " he said.

    Asked whether there might be conflict between Greece and Turkey in the Aegean, Mr Rifkind said: "It has to be a serious possibility."

    "I am not as confident as logic would imply because there has been a real lack of political will on both sides," he said.

    Britain expressed alarm last month over a Greek Cypriot decision to buy Russian surface-to-air missiles, saying it could destabilise what is already one of the most heavily militarised areas of the world.

    On a visit to the divided island in December, Mr Rifkind told Greek Cypriot leaders the planned purchase would be a "big step in the wrong direction."

    Commission sees positive results in Greek economy

    The European Commission's annual report on the performance of European Union member-states' economies in 1996, expected to be publicised in the next few days, acknowledges in its draft text on Greece that positive results are arising from implementation of a revised convergence programme.

    However, the Commission insists on the ascertainment that Greek public deficits have a structural nature, and for this reason structural policies are required to remedy existing fiscal imbalances.

    According to reports, the special chapter on the development of the Greek economy in 1996 is not expected to have major changes, additions and corrections reshaping its present content, but will contain predictions expressing satisfaction over the gover nment's efforts and estimates of a 2.4 per cent growth rate in the country over the past year.

    On the question of inflation, the report assesses an average of 6.9 per cent for 1997 and does not expect unemployment to exceed 9 per cent of the working population.

    The European Commission also hails a package of measures implemented by the government, for the first time in the country's history, and aimed at reducing public expenditures. The Commission anticipates that this initiative will result in almost the dou bling of the GDP's primary surplus in 1997 as against 1996, which in turn will contribute to a decrease in the country's excessive public debt.

    Open Skies Treaty trial flights scheduled over Larisa

    Greece will cooperate with Germany in the use of a German aircraft for trial flights to observe and photograph the Larisa region between Feb. 10- 15 within the framework of preparing implementation of the Open Skies Treaty.

    Observers from Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Italy and Spain have been invited to attend the flights.

    The Open Skies Treaty was signed in Helsinki on March 24, 1992, and establishes a system of overflights over all territory of participant countries, which aims to achieving transparency on military activities. This facilitates control regarding compliance with existing or future agreements on controlling and reducing armaments, while the possibility of preventing conflicts is also provided.

    In this context, every signatory is obliged to accept a number of photo reconnaissance flights, and at the same time it has the right to perform an equal number of flights over other countries. Two or more countries can cooperate in observation flights.

    Countries having ratified the treaty include Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Britain, Georgia, Italy, Kirgizhstan, Luxembourg, Norway, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Turkey, the United States , Hungary and Iceland.

    Greek Parliament ratified the treaty on March 20, 1993.

    Russia, Ukraine and Belarus are expected to follow suit and ratify to enable the treaty to be fully implemented.

    Health care reforms unveiled

    Health Minister Costas Geitonas said yesterday in Thessaloniki that a draft bill introducing reforms in the national health system will be tabled in the Cabinet in the next few days.

    Mr. Geitonas described the bill as "realistic," adding that it complies with the government's pre-election promises regarding the health care sector.

    He also stressed the need for immediate measures to improve both hospital premises and services, at the same time drawing attention to an existing 95- billion drachma project to construct, restore and expand hospitals in Macedonia and Thrace.

    Health Undersecretary Manolis Skoulakis also announced the creation of a new detoxification unit.

    According to the bill, the Council will convene every three months.

    Striking teachers take continuing mobilisations to downtown Athens

    Striking public school teachers caused traffic jams in the centre of Athens yesterday when they marched to the education ministry.

    Protesting teachers' morale appeared to be high as the fourth week of strike actions began, with strikers enjoying a concert outside the ministry before marching off to Parliament and then to the finance ministry.

    Meanwhile, Education Undersecretary Yiannis Anthopoulos told reporters that making up for lost school time by extending the school year "was an extreme situation", and that there were other ways to deal with the situation.

    "These methods will be discussed with the teachers when their strike ends and schools reopen," he said.

    Asked whether there were any margins for improving teachers' wages, one of their main demands, Mr. Anthopoulos said if teachers accepted a proposal put forward by the president of the teachers' federation, Nikos Tsoulias, then they would see a rise in total yearly income of between 400,000-900, 000 drachmas.

    However, the administrative board of OLME, the high school teachers' union, decided yesterday to propose to a general assembly meeting today that the strike continue for a fifth week.

    A final decision will be taken tomorrow, at a meeting of the heads of local teacher unions.

    Public childcare centres

    Meanwhile, workers at state childcare centres have given notice that they will join colleagues in strike action this month.

    An announcement said a 48-hour strike had been called for Feb. 12-13 and a three-day strike for Feb. 19-21.

    State film award winners announced

    Winners of the 1996 state film awards were announced yesterday by Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos after a selection process by the Cinema Advisory Council and the Thessaloniki film critics' committee.

    The first three prizes for feature-length films went to Andreas Patzis for "Slaughtering the Rooster", to Yannis Smaragdis for "Cavafy" and to Yannis Typaldos for "Terra Incognita".

    Prize for best documentary went to G. Zervas and G. Papaconstantinou for "When Chagall cost less than a kilo of potatoes".

    The prizes will be awarded at a special event to be held within the next few weeks in Thessaloniki.

    EU reports 45,000 deaths, 1.5 million injuries from road accidents per year

    Drivers in Greece run three times the risk of losing their life in a traffic accident than drivers in Belgium, and seven times the risk than drivers in Britain.

    Based on recent figures, the European Union is facing up to the grim reality of 45,000 deaths and 1.5 million injuries from road accidents every year, which is also translated into socio-economic costs of Ecu162 billion.

    The figure, double the EU's annual fiscal budget, calls for a common handling of the problem by all European Union partners, and the European Council for Safety and Transport (ETSC) has proposed a "strategic plan for EU road safety" with the aim of decr easing casualties to 25,000 by the year 2010.

    The plan provides for establishment of various road safety-related information systems as well as a series of measures.

    Research reveals improvement of women's position in the workplace

    Research carried out within the framework of the European Union's "ADEPT" initiative has revealed that the position of working women in society has improved, both in the percentage of working women - now exceeding 50 per cent - and in their educational le vel, with a greater number of women than men holding higher education degrees.

    Research on the workforce's adaptation to industrial change was carried out on chemical, paper, plastics, tobacco and wood industries in Macedonia and Thrace.

    According to the research, specialisations in which employers will be most interested in over the next five years will be computing, managment and business administration.

    OA, Hertz offers special fly-drive deal

    Olympic Airways (OA) has signed a deal with Hertz rent-a-car to offer its economy and executive class passengers, as well as its frequent flyers, cut- rate prices when renting cars in most OA destinations within Greece and abroad. The offer is also availab le to OA package-ticket (airline and hotel) customers as well as to airline staff.

    Macedonia-Thrace Bank enters EU investment programme

    A draft agreement was signed yesterday on the accession of the Macedonia- Thrace Bank to the financial intermediates network of the European Union's "JOP PHARE-TACIS" programme. The draft agreement anticipates cooperation between the bank and the EU in the framework of the programme of promoting investments in central and eastern European countries, as well as in the Russian Federation, particularly in relation of supporting the creation and development of joint businesses between EU partners and these countries.

    The programme's beneficiaries are the small- and medium-sized enterprises of EU member-states and their financial support will be anticipated for establishing, in cooperation with local partners, joint enterprises headquartered in central and eastern Eu ropean countries as well as in the Russian Federation. Investments to be financed include all sectors and business activities.

    WEATHER

    Fair weather in most parts of Greece, except for some local clouds in the south and local frost and fog early tomorrow morning. Athens and Thessaloniki will be mostly sunny with temperatures ranging from 4-16 in the former and - 1 to 14C in the latter.

    FOREIGN EXCHANGE

    Closing rates - buying US dlr. 257.603 Pound sterling 420.925 Cyprus pd 520.800 French franc 46.158 Swiss franc 181.253 German mark 155.789 Italian lira (100) 15.848 Yen (100) 210.125 Canadian dlr. 190.583 Australian dlr. 195.275 Irish Punt 413.267 Belgian franc 7.553 Finnish mark 52.516 Dutch guilder 138.721 Danish kr. 40.870 Swedish kr. 35.107 Norwegian kr. 39.476 Austrian sch. 22.132 Spanish peseta 1.841 Portuguese escudo 1.555

    (C.E.)


    Athens News Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article
  • Back to Top
    Copyright © 1995-2023 HR-Net (Hellenic Resources Network). An HRI Project.
    All Rights Reserved.

    HTML by the HR-Net Group / Hellenic Resources Institute, Inc.
    apeen2html v1.02 run on Tuesday, 11 February 1997 - 14:26:35 UTC