Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 98-03-13
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 13/03/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Simitis: European Conference participation conditional
- EU British presidency welcomes Clerides accession talks proposal
- Clinton signs declaration on Greek Independence Day
- US ambassador views test flights of two F-15Es
- Greek exports to Balkans, Black Sea region continue to rise
- Polish President to attend bilateral business conference in Athens
- Greek stocks rise on money market sentiment
- Preliminary inquiry in Florina power plant controversy
- Greece fails to meet obligations to non-Greek EU civil servants
- Physics professor details discovery of new 'cosmic force'
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Simitis: European Conference participation conditional
Prime Minister Costas Simitis yesterday said a precondition for the
participation of a country in the European Conference must be the
acceptance of certain basic principles governing the European Union, and
expressed at the Luxembourg summit.
Speaking at a press conference at the end of the European Conference in
London, Mr. Simitis expressed regret over the absence of Turkey but, as he
added, he felt even more regret because Turkey refused to accept what is
self-evident - international law, international accords, acceptance of the
jurisdiction of the International Court at The Hague and Europe's acquis
communautaire.
He said quite a few leaders expressed regret over Turkey's absence (such as
France and Italy), but no special reference is made in the joint communique
and it is merely noted that the European Conference is open to all
countries.
On the question of the Turkish Cypriots' participation in negotiations for
Cyprus' accession to the European Union, Mr. Simitis said that proposals by
Cyprus President Glafcos Clerides correspond to the spirit of decisions
taken in Luxembourg and now it is up to the Turkish Cypriots to state their
position.
Mr. Simitis said that in talks he had with his British counterpart he
ascertained that British PM Tony Blair has a positive approach to the
prospect of Cyprus' accession, adding that no pressures were exerted by the
French side.
He further said that the decisions taken in Luxembourg still hold (clear
reference is made in the communique), stressing that continuous steps are
being made and the way is being paved for the new Europe regardless of
whether the path is still long. There is a spectacular event in that a new
reality is being created in Europe, he said.
On other issues Mr. Simitis stressed the need to combat crime was discussed
at the European Conference, as was the issue of drugs and of environmental
protection. He said it was self-evident that each country by itself cannot
tackle these issues and consequently better coordination is necessary,
along with harmonisation of legislation and common policies.
On the issue of organised crime, it was agreed that experts should be
appointed to review the situation and submit a report in a year's time on
what must be done.
Lastly, it was decided that the issues of foreign policy and security,
regional development and competitiveness will be discussed at the next
European Conference (a year later).
Referring to this issue, Mr. Simitis said during the press conference that
Greece favours the maintenance of the territorial integrity of Yugoslavia
but, additionally, requests protection for the rights of the Albanians and
the implementation of agreements on Kosovo.
Mr. Simitis added that Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos told Yugoslav
authorities during his recent visit to Belgrade that there must be some
kind of a move on their part such as the implementation of the educational
accord concluded in 1996 and a serious effort for dialogue.
"These moves have not taken place so far," he said, adding that "of course,
this leads to ever-increasing pressure on the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia by the international community. We hope (Yugoslav President
Slobodan) Milosevic realises this and makes some kind of a move."
EU British presidency welcomes Clerides accession talks proposal
Britain yesterday praised a proposal put forward by Cyprus President
Glafcos Clerides, inviting Turkish Cypriots to participate as members of
the Cypriot team which will negotiate the country's accession terms with
the European Union.
"The proposal-invitation of President Clerides to the Turkish Cypriots is a
courageous move and I congratulate him.
Of course, we desire the delegation to be mixed, given that the island's
membership of the EU will benefit both communities, and much more so the
Turkish Cypriots, who have a much lower standard of living," Mr. Cook said
during a British EU presidency news briefing.
EU Commission President Jacques Santer, who was present at the briefing,
stressed that procedures already approved should be sticked to.
"We must remain steadfast on the decisions we adopted during the Luxembourg
summit regarding Cyprus' accession course. These decisions must in no case
be overturned," he said when questioned what would happen if the Turkish
Cypriots did not ultimately join the delegation.
Cypriot diplomatic sources told ANA that at a meeting at the Foreign Office
yesterday between Messrs. Cook and Clerides, the British side expressed
embarrassment and regret over Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash's
refusal to meet Mr. Cook.
The British side raised again the issue of the deployment of S-300 Russian-
made anti-aircraft missile systems on the island, the same sources said.
Mr. Clerides reiterated the position that the issue is linked either with a
demilitarisation of the island or significant progress on the Cyprus
issue.
A Foreign Office spokesman, quoted yesterday by the Cyprus News Agency,
welcomed President Clerides' proposal.
"We welcome the proposal put forward by President Clerides regarding the
participation of Turkish Cypriots in the delegation which will negotiate
the accession," the Foreign Office spokesman said.
Describing Mr. Clerides' proposal as a "positive offer", the spokesman said
that Britain attaches "special importance to the specific proposal which
says that Turkish Cypriots will nominate representatives as full members of
the delegation".
He noted that the first thing the EU Council President will do now is to
submit the proposal at the Foreign Ministers meeting in Edinburgh over the
weekend and "then if there is an agreement there, they will hand it to the
Turkish Cypriots".
Mr. Clerides yesterday made an "honest and solemn" invitation towards
Turkish Cypriots to participate as full members of a Cypriot delegation set
to negotiate the country's accession terms with the European Union.
Mr. Clerides also assured the Turkish Cypriots that their views will be
discussed "freely, seriously and in good faith," and expressed the hope
they will accept the invitation.
Clinton signs declaration on Greek Independence Day
US President Bill Clinton yesterday signed a declaration at the White House
for Greek Independence Day.
Archbishop of America Spyridon, European Commissioner Christos Papoutsis,
Athens' ambassador to Washigton Loukas Tsilas and leaders of the Greek-
American community were present at this annual 15-minute ceremony.
Spyridon, after the meeting, said that "we are very satisfied over the
meeting with the president of the United States. The discussion was cordial
and during (this meeting) we were able to discuss many issues regarding our
expatriates in America, but al so of Hellenism in general."
He added that "we talked, of course, about the recent visit of the
Ecumenical Patriarch and the problems regarding the Patriarchate."
Mr. Papoutsis expressed his personal satisfaction over the meeting.
The EU Commissioner is visiting the US for a series of meetings with US
officials on issues regarding energy, small and medium businesses and
tourism.
Mr. Papoutsis was due to meet later in the day with US Energy Secretary
Frederico Pena to discuss the deregulation of the EU energy market.
He will also meet with Federal Reserve board member Lawrence Meyer, US
Assistant Secretary of State on financial affairs Stuart Eizenstat and Mr.
Clinton's adviser on EU matters, as well as Greek-American Senator Paul
Sarbanes.
US ambassador views test flights of two F-15Es
US ambassador in Athens Nicholas Burns yesterday visited the headquarters
of the 111th Hellenic Air Force fighter wing in Volos in order to observe
test flights of two US-made F-15E fighters, currently being evaluated by
Greek pilots.
The US ambassador was briefed by the base's commander and a Boeing
representative on the operational capabilities of the third-generation
fighter.
Greece is currently considering the purchase of F-15Es and additional F-16s,
a display of which the US ambassador viewed in February.
Mr. Burns later visited the town of Lamia, where he met with local
government officials.
Meanwhile, the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) reacted strongly to Mr.
Burns' visit to Lamia, also criticising the government for allowing, as it
claimed, what it called Mr. Burns' "provocative" tours and contacts around
the country.
"Equally provocative is the government's stand, which allows Mr. Burns to
inspect police forces and the operation of state enterprises, and to hold
direct contacts on economic issues," KKE said in a statement.
"Diplomats' moves are subject to certain limits," a KKE announcement
read.
Greek exports to Balkans, Black Sea region continue to rise
A one-day seminar on trade activities in the Balkans and Black Sea region
yesterday noted that exports of Greek products towards these areas are
steadily rising.
According to results announced at the end of the conference, Greek exports
to the Balkans rose by 31 per cent in 1996 compared to 1995, reaching
US$1.6 billion.
Exports to the Black Sea region rose to $1.4 billion in 1996, while in 1995
they did not exceed $337 million. Greek exports to Turkey rose from $86
million in 1986 to $354 million in 1996.
Meanwhile, Turkish exports to Greece rose from $21 million to $231 million
during the same time period.
The press release also noted that about 30 Greek businesses are active in
Turkey today.
Polish President to attend bilateral business conference in Athens
Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski will attend a Greek-Polish business
conference on ways of expanding economic relations, scheduled in Athens
between April 5 and 7.
The conference is sponsored by the commercial section of the Polish embassy
in Athens and the national economy ministry.
National Economy Minister Yiannos Papantoniou and his Polish counterpart
Janus Steinhof will also attend.
Discussions will focus on possible cooperation in the sectors of energy,
telecommunications, defence, agriculture, foodstuffs and metals works.
Greek stocks rise on money market sentiment
Greek equities extended their rally for the third consecutive session on
the Athens Stock Exchange.
Traders said market sentiment was boosted by favourable developments in the
domestic money market and positive comments on the future of the drachma
and the Greek bourse by international financial houses.
The general index ended 0.81 percent up at 1,543.62 points although sector
indices were mixed.
Banks rose 0.71 percent, Insurance fell 0.20 percent, Leasing eased 0.45
percent, Investment ended 0.38 percent up, Construction dropped 2.29
percent, Industrials were 0.68 percent higher, Miscellaneous fell 0.42
percent and Holding was 0.11 percent off .
The parallel market index for small cap companies remained unchanged. The
FTSE/ASE index rose 1.13 percent to 872.66 points.
Trading was heavy with turnover at 26.1 billion drachmas. Hellenic
Telecommunications Organisation's share price shot up 220 drachmas to 6,735
in a heavy volume of 1,200,000 issues after a buy recommendation and a
prediction of a 8,000-drachma price by the end of the year by international
investment bank JP Morgan.
Broadly, decliners led advancers by 106 to 101 with another 32 issues
unchanged.
Maxim, Dane, Rilken and Chalyps Cement scored the biggest percentage gains
at the day's 8.0 percent upper volatility limit, while Diekat, Mouriadis,
Ekter, Sfakianakis and Katselis suffered the heaviest losses.
National Bank of Greece ended at 22,800, Ergobank at 16,065, Alpha Credit
Bank at 17,230, Delta Dairy at 3,200, Titan Cement at 14,930 and Intracom
at 15,700.
Preliminary inquiry on Florina power plant controversy
An Athens prosecutor has ordered a preliminary inquiry, underway for about
20 days now, to ascertain the truth behind press reports claiming a major
scandal over construction of a Public Power Corp. (DEH) power plant in
Florina.
The preliminary examination, ordered by Georgios Koliocostas, is being
conducted by prosecutor Constantine Tzavelas, who is currently summoning
and questioning witnesses.
According to reports, ruling PASOK deputy and former DEH employee trade
unionist Dimitris Pipergias has been summoned to testify on Monday.
Development Minister Mrs Vasso Papandreou yesterday charged critics of new
Florina power plant with allegedly representing vested interests.
She said that the construction of the power plant will be completed in 55
months and will employ 4,500 workers, while she added that the plant's life
expectancy is forecast at more than 40 years, with 2,000 full-time jobs
created.
Greece fails to meet obligations to non-Greek EU civil servants
The European Court has convicted Greece for failing to respect the
financial rights of non-Greek European Union employees working in the Greek
public sector.
Such rights have been guaranteed since 1968 by EU regulations.
According to the EU regulations - Article VII, Paragragh 1 - a citizen of a
member-state must be accorded the same treatment in pay, work relations and
conditions, severance pay and vocational rehabilitation or re-employment if
he becomes unemployed.
Greece was found in violation of EU regulations, since time-bonus and
salary classifications for employees in the Greek public sector did not
take into account years worked in the public sector of other member-
states.
Physics professor details discovery of new 'cosmic force'
Scientists hope that the discovery of a new cosmic force will provide the
key to a theory on how the universe was created.
Presenting the discovery at the Athens Academy last night, which he
described as "dramatic", theoretical physics professor Dimitris Nanopoulos
said it concerned the so-called 'cosmological constant', which US
scientists at the University of California a t Berkeley had found to be
causing the expansion of the universe at an accelerated rate.
He said the discovery annuls the view that after the "Big Bang" (15 billion
years ago) the gravity of celestial objects slows down the expansion of the
universe, as indicated by the hitherto four known forces of the universe -
(weak, strong, electromagn etic and gravitational.
The cosmological constant (0.7), the fifth force, tends towards 1, and is
opposing gravity.
Prof. Nanopoulos said Albert Einstein had made a passing reference to this
force in 1916. He added that he and his aides made efforts to study it,
after repeatedly encountering the phenomenon during research in 1994-95.
However, they did not give the a ppropriate attention until commencement of
research by their US colleagues, he added.
WEATHER
Cloudiness with moderate winds is forecast for most parts of Greece today,
especially the Ionian islands. Rain and sleet in Thrace. Winds northerly,
strong to gale force. Athens will be cloudy and cold with temperatures
between 2-13C. Similar weather in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 1-
6C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Wednesday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 287.452
Pound sterling 471.736 Cyprus pd 536.255
French franc 46.757 Swiss franc 192.547
German mark 156.761 Italian lira (100) 15.928
Yen (100) 222.744 Canadian dlr. 203.955
Australian dlr. 191.798 Irish Punt 389.162
Belgian franc 7.599 Finnish mark 51.673
Dutch guilder 139.088 Danish kr. 41.130
Swedish kr. 35.811 Norwegian kr. 37.698
Austrian sch. 22.285 Spanish peseta 1.849
Port. Escudo 1.535
(C.E.)
|