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Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-09-24
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 24/09/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Greek concerns over Kosovo strike
- Inquiry ordered in botched raid
- Twelve injured, one critically
- Simitis, Romeos to meet
- Reppas critical of media's role
- Greece gets first-ever Ombudsman
- Six flights cancelled
- Two Albanians killed in raid
- Man murdered for 20,000 drachmas
- Crew, captain charged over illegal immigrants
- Greek economy strong
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Greek concerns over Kosovo strike
Greece continues to have reservations about the possibility of a strike by
international forces on Kosovo and would continue to urge a political
resolution to the problem, the government said on Thursday. Government
spokesman Dimitris Reppas said Athens was doubtful about the effectiveness
of a military intervention but would take part in any operation if the
legal framework for it was ensured. He said however that talk of an
intervention was still premature, given the UN Security Council had yet to
decide on one. On Wednesday, the Security Council demanded an immediate
ceasefire and negotiations to end the conflict in Kosovo. China was the
only permanent member to abstain.
Inquiry ordered in botched raid
An urgent preliminary investigation was called on Thursday to examine the
specifics of Wednesday night's hostage drama, which left two, including one
of the hostages, seriously injured, and another ten in hospital. Twelve
people, including the head and deputy head of the police force and six
police officers, were injured when a hand grenade exploded following a
standoff between police and a Greek-Romanian fugitive in a downtown Athens
apartment early on Thursday. The preliminary inquiry is expected to look at
the circumstances surrounding the decision to raid the apartment as
well as what occured in the lead-up to the taking of hostages and
the aftermath of the raid. The inquiry will decide whether disciplinary
or criminal charges should be laid against those involved.
Twelve injured, one critically
Pandemonium broke out after police stormed the apartment where 27-year old
Sorin Matei was holding three hostages, threatening to detonate a hand
grenade. Secretary General of the Ministry of Public Order Yiannis
Papadogiannakis said police stormed the apartment in the belief that the
hand grenade was fake. According to a police spokesman, Matei, who was
under the influence of heroin, pulled the pin from the grenade and attached
it to the trousers of one of the hostages, Amalia Ginaki, 25. Ginaki was
listed as being in a critical condition at the Red Cross hospital after
surgery which resulted in the amputation of her leg. Doctors held out
little hope she would survive. One of the police officers injured in the
blast lost his right leg. The deputy chief of police was reported to be
undergoing surgery to remove a foreign object from his eye.
Simitis, Romeos to meet
Prime Minister Costas Simitis said on Thursday he would be meeting with
Public Order Minister George Romeos at 3 p.m. to make an assessment of the
situation. Speaking at a ceremony to inaugurate the opening of an
ombudsman's office, Simitis expressed his condolences and support to the
victims of the incident and hopes for a speedy recovery. Romeos, he said,
was hurrying back from Brussels where he had been attending a meeting of EU
ministers.
Reppas critical of media's role
Referring to Matei's hours-long conversation with an anchorman on Skai
television during the siege and of the presence of many reporters at the
scene of the siege, Reppas, who is also press and media minister, said the
media should not take over the role of public functions on the pretext of
informing the public, nor obstruct the activities of the authorities. "The
media's voraciousness was apparent yesterday," he noted, adding that the
president of the National Radio and Television Council had considered
interrupting the transmission of Skai's conversation between Matei and the
news anchor but that it continued after Matei threatened the lives of
the hostages if he were cut off.
Greece gets first-ever Ombudsman
Prime Minister Costas Simitis on Thursday officially inaugurated the
opening of first-ever Ombudsman's office in Greece, announcing the
appointment of an assistant ombudsman to handle issues relating to those
serving in the armed forces. Simitis said the assistant ombudsman would
contribute to the better protection of the fundamental rights of troops and
would work closely with the Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos, Interior
Minister Alekos Papadopoulos and the new Ombudsman, Nikiforos Diamantouros.
The office of the Ombudsman will open to the public as of October 1 and is
located at 5 Hatiyiannis Mexis, St., Athens.
Six flights cancelled
Six domestic Olympic Aviation and Olympic Airways flight were cancelled on
Thursday, the first day of a series of rolling 24-hour strikes by civil
aviation employees. A company statement said the flights had been cancelled
due to a lack of fire safety personnel. The employees are protesting
against planned changes in the institutional framework of work regulations,
being introduced by the government. The employees are demanding that two
bills due to be submitted to parliament be scrapped. They charge that the
bills provide for the establishment of a company which would regulate
airports and civil aviation.
Two Albanians killed in raid
Two illegal immigrants were killed early on Thursday when police raided a
disused windmill near the northern Greek town of Naoussa on a tip-off that
it had turned into a meeting point for drug sales, police said. The two
young Albanian nationals were part of group of 10 of their compatriots
which was storing arms and distributing drugs from the mill. But when
police raided the mill, the immigrants started shooting. Police returned
the fire and fatally wounded the two men. The other eight Albanians managed
to escape and are being sought by the police.
Man murdered for 20,000 drachmas
Earlier in Naoussa, an unidentified young Albanian man robbed and killed a
55-year old gas-station owner. The Albanian, armed with a shotgun, entered
the gas-station owned by Ioannis Andreou, who was there with his wife Maria,
46, and demanded the contents of his cash register. When Andreou refused,
the Albanian shot him through the heart, pistol-whipped the woman, removed
20,000 drachmas from the cash register and took off.
Crew, captain charged over illegal immigrants
The captain and four crew of the Lebanese flagged ship "Alak" face charges
on Thursday of violating the law of transporting aliens for illegal profit
and endangering lives, after their boat was found with 167 illegal
immigrants aboard. The coastguard arrested the captain and crew on
Wednesday as their boat sailed south of the island of Crete and just prior
to disembarking the illegal immigrants at an isolated bay. The illegal
immigrants - 56 men, 31 women and 80 children, including several infants,
all Iraqi nationals of Kurdish origin - "were packed like sardines on board
a 20-meter long wooden boat," a spokesman said. They had been at sea for
almost a week since the boat sailed from the Lebanese port of Abta on Sept.
18 and a number were suffering from dehydration.
Greek economy strong
The Greek economy remained strong in the first seven months of 1998,
according to figures released by the National Statistics Service on
Thursday. Industrial production increased 8.4 percent in July alone to show
a 5.1 percent increase in the period January-July compared with the same
period last year. Construction activity was also sharply higher, rising by
12.7 percent in June for a 10.7 percent increase in the first seven months
of 1998 compared with the corresponding period in 1997.
WEATHER
Mostly fair weather will prevail throughout Greece on today with scattered
cloud in the east and south of the country. Winds northerly, northeasterly,
light to moderate, turning strong in the Aegean Sea. Athens will be sunny
with few clouds and temperatures between 17-27C. Same in Thessaloniki with
temperatures from 15-25C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Thursday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 288.454
British pound 485.207 Japanese yen (100) 212.040
French franc 50.927 German mark 170.738
Italian lira (100) 17.322 Irish Punt 427.254
Belgian franc 8.286 Finnish mark 56.169
Dutch guilder 151.672 Danish kr. 45.112
Austrian sch. 24.345 Spanish peseta 2.023
Swedish kr. 36.668 Norwegian kr. 38.390
Swiss franc 206.748 Port. Escudo 1.667
Aus. dollar 166.160 Can. dollar 188.778
Cyprus pound 578.336
(M.P.)
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