Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 98-05-29
NEWS IN ENGLISH
ATHENS, GREECE, 29/05/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Greece satisfied with NATO decisions on defusing Kosovo crisis
- Ionian employees vote to continue strike despite court order
- Hellenic Petroleum share flotation
- Greek stocks recoup some losses, buoyed by privatisation
- Development minister to launch new packaging plant
- Opposition leader urges gov't to scrap property tax
- Petzetakis share capital increase
- Sarantis sales up, foreign currency loans increase losses
- 18 per cent increase in Delta sales
- Reduced rates for several OA flights
- Rapprochement necessitates end of Ankara's aggressive policies
- Tsohatzopoulos briefed on construction of 3 tank landing craft
- Spanish royals visit Thessaloniki, leave today
- U.S. conference on Pontians' ethnic cleansing
- Conference debates Alexander the Great tomb site
- Smoking still a bad habit for young Greeks
- One-fourth of economic protocol to Albania disbursed
- Deal for AEK's Nikolaidis all but finished by Anderlecht
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Greece satisfied with NATO decisions on defusing Kosovo crisis
Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos yesterday described as positive a NATO
decision to consider ways to stop the Kosovo conflict from spilling over
its borders, as well as military measures to supplement diplomatic mo ves
for a settlement.
Speaking at a press conference after the end of the NATO foreign ministers'
session, Mr. Pangalos clarified that the decision did not imply an
intervention in the internal affairs of the sovereign Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia, and that NATO clearly condemned the use of violence and
terrorism in the region, calling on both sides to work for a peaceful
resolution of the crisis.
He stated Greece's intention to contribute to the strengthening of forces
that would be deployed in both neighbouring countries, in response to their
urgent requests.
Mr. Pangalos revealed that Athens had disagreed with all other alliance
members on a clause in the draft communique, providing for the possibility
of NATO air exercises over Kosovo.
Ionian employees vote to continue strike despite court order
A general assembly of the Ionian Bank employees overwhelmingly approved a
proposal by the union president Yiannis Markakis to continue their strike,
despite a court ruling on Wednesday declaring the strike illegal.
The endorsed proposal anticipates the continuation of the strike with
rolling 48-hour strikes, backed by the Federation of Bank Employee Unions
(OTOE).
Mr. Markakis left open the possibility for dialogue with the government but
on condition that it will start on a "zero basis", that Commercial Bank's
general assembly not take place, as well as on the conditions that the sale
of the Ionian must stop being considered as the sole basis for discussion
and that all other proposals must be examined equally.
Hellenic Petroleum share flotation
The Hellenic Petroleum S.A. group will provide 46,430,000 shares with
public registration and private investment, of which 27,841,702 concern the
sale of existing shares belonging to the state.
The above shares will be provided in part on the international market
through private investment, as well as on the local market with public
registration for investors (at least 30 per cent of the total issue) and
with private investment for the company's employees. Accumulated capital
from the increase in share capital will be used primarily to finance the
company's investment programme.
Greek stocks recoup some losses, buoyed by privatisation
Greek equities rebounded on the Athens Stock Exchange yesterday halting a
sharp decline in the previous two sessions.
Traders said the market had regained confidence in a government drive to
privatise state-owned banks and public enterprises.
The general index closed 1.03 percent higher at 2,549.07 points with most
sector indices ending up.
Trade was moderate with turnover at 62.6 billion drachmas.
Banks rose 1.25 percent, Insurance jumped 2.97 percent, Investment
increased 1.55 percent, Leasing fell 0.07 percent, Industrials rose 0.46
percent, Construction ended 1.93 percent up, Miscellaneous soared 2.84
percent and Holding ended 1.45 percent hig her.
The parallel market index for small cap companies ended 0.45 percent up,
and the FTSE/ASE 20 index rose 1.03 percent to finish at 1,529.38.
National Bank of Greece ended at 43,300 drachmas, Ergobank at 27,010, Alpha
Credit Bank at 31,700, Delta Dairy at 4,410, Titan Cement at 23,330,
Intracom at 20,250 and Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation at 8,
550.
Development minister to launch new packaging plant
Development Minister Vasso Papandreou will launch a new 63-million dollar
packaging plant on Sunday as part of a three-day tour of the prefecture of
Magnesia. The plant is owned by VPI SA, whose shareholders are private
Hellenic Bottling SA (51 percent) , state-run Hellenic Petroleum SA (35
percent), and Radici of Italy (14 percent). It produces PET packaging
material, a form of plastic.
Hellenic Bottling is a blue chip on the Athens bourse, and Hellenic
Petroleum is scheduled for a part-float this summer.
The investment is unusual for Greece as it spans the public and private
sectors, and also two countries. A hundred jobs have been created in the
scheme.
Tomorrow she will visit Metka SA and Imas SA to monitor progress in long-
term contracts the two firms made with Public Power Corp. worth 36 billion
drachmas.
Opposition leader urges gov't to scrap property tax
Main opposition New Democracy leader Costas Karamanlis yesterday called on
the government to abolish an unpopular tax on larger real estate (FMAP),
vowing his party would do so if it came to power.
"Common sense dictates the abolition of FMAP, and we, as government, shall
do so," Mr. Karamanlis told reporters during a visit to a suburban tax
office. He said that the cost of implementing the tax was higher than its
revenue.
Mr. Karamanlis also accused the government of improvisation and a lack of
coordination in handling tax returns, resulting in thousands of mistakes
and inconvenience to taxpayers.
The tax officers union said recently that complexities in the system had
led to numerous errors in estimating the tax payable on property. The
outcome was that many taxpayers were overcharged.
Petzetakis share capital increase
The AG Petzetakis S.A. company will proceed with an increase in its share
capital by issuing 695,625 new shares at a sale price of 1,200 drachmas
each and 177,856 new privileged shares at a sale price of 650 drachmas per
share.
The new shares will be provided with a right of preference for old shares
and at a ratio of 1:10 in both cases.
Sarantis sales up, foreign currency loans increase losses
Sales of the Sarantis cosmetics group increased by 31 per cent in the first
quarter of 1998, totalling 6.6 billion drachmas against 5 billion drachmas
in the corresponding period last year.
The company presented losses of 361 million drachmas due to the registration
of extraordinary losses totalling 1.16 billion drachmas from loans in
foreign currency. Prior to these losses, the company had showed profits of
803 million drachmas as against 344 million drachmas in the corresponding
period last year.
18 per cent increase in Delta sales
The Delta dairy company increased sales by 18 per cent in the first quarter
of the year, totalling 16.5 billion drachmas, while profits increased by 12
per cent, to 537 million drachmas.
At a group level, sales increased by 24 per cent and total profits amounted
to 933 million drachmas as against 817 million drachmas over the corresponding
period last year. Depreciation carried out during the first three months in
1998 amounted to 2.1 b illion drachmas.
Reduced rates for several OA flights
Olympic Airways will offer reduced fares for a limited number of seats to
20 European round-trip destinations from Athens and Thessaloniki as of June
1. Specifically, fares to the following destinations will be decreased to
75,000 drachmas:
Amsterdam, Budapest, Berlin; Brussels, Copenhagen, Dusseldorf, Frankfurt,
Zurich, Geneva, London, Istanbul, Milan, Moscow, Marseilles, Munich, Naples,
Paris, Rome, Stuttgart and Vienna.
Rapprochement necessitates end of Ankara's aggressive policies
Athens would be prepared to agree to a step-by-step approach in resolving
differences with Turkey if Ankara ended its aggressive policies towards
Greece, Defence Undersecretary Dimitris Apostolakis said yesterday during
sessions of the 7th annual high-level US-Greek consultative committee
conference in Williamsburg, Virginia.
The conference, co-chaired by Mr. Apostolakis and his US counterpart Jon
Lodal, examined Greek-Turkish relations, the Kosovo situation and the
Balkans, as well as NATO enlargement eastwards.
Mr. Apostolakis said "the creation of conditions of security and stability
in our broader region is in Greece's legitimate interest. We believe NATO
enlargement will contribute to this".
"Greece seeks the promotion of institutions and bodies of regional security
in the Balkans," he said, mentioning his recent participation in a Tirana
conference with area counterparts, which discussed the formation of a
peacekeeping force in the region.
Tsohatzopoulos briefed on construction of 3 tank landing craft
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos yesterday visited the
Elefsina Shipyards to be briefed on the progress of work on the last three
tank landing craft for the Hellenic Navy.
Mr. Tsohatzopoulos requested that construction to be accelerated to enable
delivery of the first of the three vessels in December.
Delivery dates for the craft had already been brought up to schedule,
compared to those set out in the original contract, according to reports.
The first vessel was to have been delivered in February 1999, the second in
December 1999 rather than January 2000, and the third in February 2000
instead of July 2000. Workers and management at the yard assured the
minister that they would do everything possible to keep these dates and
even bring them further forward.
The three vessels yet to be completed and delivered are the "Lesvos",
"Ikaria" and "Rhodos". Two tank landing craft built at the yard - the Samos
and Hios - have already been delivered.
Spanish royals visit Thessaloniki, leave today
Spain's King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia arrived in Thessaloniki yesterday
on the final leg of their five-day official visit to Greece.
The Spanish royal couple's first stop was at the city's memorial to the
Greek Jews exterminated by Nazi troops during World War II.
The president of Thessaloniki's Jewish community, Andreas Sefiha, greeted
the Spanish royal couple as they arrived to lay a wreath at the memorial,
erected last November to commemorate the more than 50,000 mostly Sephardic
Jews killed during occupation.
Mr. Sefiha, speaking in Spanish and Greek, reminded those present of the
tragic history of the Sephardic Jews, who arrived in Ottoman-ravaged
Thessaloniki in 1492 after being expelled from Spain at the height of the
Inquisition.
In his address, Juan Carlos spoke of the recent past, of Spanish efforts
during the Second World War to protect Jews of Thessaloniki being hounded
by the Nazis, referring to a 1924 decree which bestowed Spanish citizenship
on those descendants of Spanish-speaking Jews.
Juan Carlos and Sophia also visited the Byzantine Museum to tour the
"Treasures of Mount Athos" exhibition.
U.S. conference on Pontians' ethnic cleansing
The Federation of US and Canada Black Sea Greeks (Pontians) in cooperation
with the Greek Federation of Pontian Societies, the World Council of
Hellenes Abroad (SAE) and Greece's general secretariat for expatriates will
organise a two-day conference on June 5 on the issue of ethnic cleansing of
Greeks of the Black Sea regions of Turkey. It should be noted that about
353,000 Greeks were killed and hundreds of thousands expelled from the
northern regions of Asia Minor betwee n 1912 and 1923, as part of a general
ethnic and religious cleansing by Ottoman and later Turkish regimes.
Conference debates Alexander the Great tomb site
Two Egyptian archaeology professors yesterday debated the exact location of
Alexander the Great's tomb in Alexandria, during a conference entitled
"From Macedonia to the World", which began Wednesday in Veria and will last
until Saturday.
Archaeology professor Faouzi el Fakharani said that "if the tomb of
Alexander the Great is discovered...it will be more significant than the
pyramid of Tutankhamen."
Mr. Fakharani said that the mistake many reseachers make is that they
confuse the facts about ancient Alexandria with the one of the early Arab
era.
He added that the topography and the size of the city has changed, with the
only reliable sources being those dating before the 4th century AD.
Mr. Fakharani said that his study is based on ancient sources dating from
25 AD to the 3rd century AD as well as the entrance of an ancient tomb with
a Macedonian architectural style, found at the old Orthodox cemetery of
Alexandria.
Another Egyptian archaeology professor, Mahmoud el Saadani, diagreed with
his compatriot, saying the tomb is approximately 1.25 miles from the
position Mr. Farakhani pointed out.
Smoking still a bad habit for young Greeks
Greeks are smoking more than ever and starting younger but the majority of
them still believe there should be a ban on tobacco advertising, according
to the findings of a study, released yesterday.
Greeks begin smoking, on average, at the age of 13.5, according to the
Greek Cardiology Centre's (ELIKAP) survey of 5,000 students aged 12-18 in
20 different areas around Greece.
Of the sample group, nine percent were regular smokers, 30 percent were
occasional smokers while 86 percent had parents who were smokers.
Although only 26 percent of Greek women smoke - compared to 60 percent of
Greek men - the percentage is still one of the highest in the European
Union. Another study showed that 40 percent of female medical students were
smokers.
One-fourth of economic protocol to Albania disbursed
National Economy Undersecretary Alekos Baltas yesterday announced that five
billion drachmas out of 20 billion envisaged under an economic cooperation
protocol with Albania have already been disbursed, and that ratification
procedures are underway for the remaining instalments.
Earlier, Foreign Undersecretary Yiannos Kranidiotis chaired an inter-
ministerial meeting which discussed a wide range of issues, including
implementation of the protocol as well as management of water resources
with neighbouring countries (Albania, FY ROM), implementation of new visa
regulations after Greece's accession to the Schengen Treaty and cooperation
with developing countries.
Deal for AEK's Nikolaidis all but finished by Anderlecht
Greek football star Demis Nikolaidis is reportedly only a step away from
signing with one-time Belgian powerhouse Anderlecht, according to sources
from Brussels.
The same sources said representatives of the Brussels-area club are
expected soon in Athens to finalise the deal for the 25-year-old Nikolaidis,
one of the most lethal strikers in the Greek first division with popular
AEK Athens. The deal is widely expe cted to be the most expensive transfer
ever for a Greek footballer.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy weather with possible scattered showers is forecast in the
western parts of Greece today. Winds variable, light to moderate.
Possibility of rain in the evening in Athens with temperatures between 16-
28C. Similar weather in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 15-26C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Thursday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 303.731
British pound 493.024 Japanese yen(100) 219.262
French franc 50.741 German mark 170.153
Italian lira (100) 17.266 Irish Punt 428.346
Belgian franc 8.247 Finnish mark 55.988
Dutch guilder 150.972 Danish kr. 44.680
Austrian sch. 24.186 Spanish peseta 2.003
Swedish kr. 38.797 Norwegian kr. 40.120
Swiss franc 205.344 Port. Escudo 1.661
Aus. dollar 188.381 Can. dollar 208.320
Cyprus pound 577.840
(C.E.)
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