Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 98-09-25
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 25/09/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Top police officials removed following botched hostage raid
- Pangalos to UN General Assembly: Ankara promotes Cyprus' partition
- Pangalos pessimistic over prospects of upcoming Antalya summit
- Reservations over any multinational strike in Kosovo
- Papandreou: Cyprus EU prospects upset Turkey's strategy
- First-ever Ombudsman's office in Greece opens
- Parliament debates on the Internet
- Court rules civil aviation employees strike illegal
- Gov't launches subscriptions for privatisation bonds today
- Industrial output, construction rise sharply
- Gov't formally submits bourse reform bill to parliament
- Greek stocks jump following Wall Street hopes of US rate cut
- Parliament committee okays reduction in tax fines
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Top police officials removed following botched hostage raid
An urgent preliminary investigation was called yesterday to examine the
circumstances surrounding Wednesday night's hostage drama in downtown
Athens, which ended in a badly botched raid by police.
The unprecedented incident - the detonation of a handgrenade planted on one
of the hostages by a Romanian outlaw - left two people critically wounded,
and another 10 with various degrees of injuries, most high-ranking police
officers.
In the aftermath, the chief of Greek Police Athanasios Vassilopoulos
offered his resignation, which was accepted. In addition, the head of
police forces in Attica, Yiannis Georgakopoulos, and the director of
security, Theodoros Papafilis, were dismissed . All three men were injured
in the blast.
Public Order Minister George Romeos announced the decisions after meeting
Prime Minister Costas Simitis. The Greek premier rejected the resignations
tendered by Mr. Romeos and the ministry's secretary-general, Yiannis
Papadogiannakis.
A new head of police will be appointed today, when the Government Council
for Foreign Affairs and Defence (KYSEA) meets.
Pandemonium broke out after police commandos stormed a first-floor
apartment where 27-year-old Sorin Matei was holding three hostages,
threatening to detonate a grenade. In a late night press interview, Mr.
Papadogiannakis said police stormed the apartment in the belief that the
grenade was fake.
Matei received treatment for his injuries and is being kept under armed
guard.
Pangalos to UN General Assembly: Ankara promotes Cyprus' partition
Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos yesterday accused Turkey of promoting
the partition of Cyprus by its intransigence instead of contributing to a
just and viable solution to the island republic's protracted problem.
"The reaction from Ankara, obediently echoed by the Turkish Cypriot
leadership has been one of harsh rejection. Either in terms of a flat
negation, or by putting conditions, tantamount to cancelling whatever has
been so far desired by the international community, prescribed by the UN
resolutions and even accepted by the Turkish Cypriot leadership themselves,
" Mr. Pangalos said in his address to the 53rd United Nations' General
Assembly yesterday.
"Such an attitude of rejection is easily explained by notorious designs of
the Turkish government to effect the partition of Cyprus. Mr. (Bulent)
Ecevit, deputy prime minister of Turkey, has in several occasions pointed
out that the Cyprus question had be en resolved, once and for all, by his
country's armed forces invasion in 1974," he added.
"It is time for the international community to strongly support the UN
Secretary General to fulfill his mandate, to bring the two communities to
the negotiating table, to initiate a dialogue on gradual disarmament
towards the complete demilitarisation of the island," he added.
"Greece wishes to establish good neighborly relations with Turkey, based on
the principles of international law and respect for international treaties,
" the Greek foreign minister told the assembly referring to Greek-Turkish
relations.
Pangalos pessimistic over prospects of upcoming Antalya summit
Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos yesterday appeared pessimistic over
prospects for a Cyprus problem solution and possible progress on resolving
differences during a planned meeting of the Greek and Turkish prime
ministers in Antalya, Turkey, in November.
"The strategy of the Turkish military and (Deputy Prime Minister Bulent)
Ecevit is to close all doors," he told reporters after 90 minutes of talks
with US Assistant Secretary of State for Europe Mark Grossman.
Discussion, besides Cyprus, involved a series of other issues, including
Kosovo, Albania, and the Middle East. Responding to questions on the
results of the meeting, Mr. Pangalos said all issues were "making
headway".
Mr. Grossman said discussion had been substantive and important".
Pointing out that the US proposition and effort "is to try to bring the
right kind of solution to Cyprus", Mr. Grossman reaffirmed that the US
position is for a "bi-zonal, bi-communal federation".
Reservations over any multinational strike in Kosovo
Greece continues to have reservations about the possibility of a strike by
international forces in Kosovo and would continue to urge a political
resolution to the problem, Athens stressed yesterday.
Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said the Greek government doubted 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.
In New York, Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos said Greece did not agree
with the view that the resolution granted NATO a free hand to intervene,
and that in his opinion NATO continued to hold such a prospect as a warning
and a threat.
Papandreou: Cyprus EU prospects upset Turkey's strategy
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou expressed the view that the
prospect of Cyprus joining the EU has upset Turkey's strategy on the
island's political problem, and that Ankara's negative reaction is
intensifying its isolation even further.
"The course towards EU accession has clearly overturned the established
situation of recent years, a strategy of Turkey that aimed to hold the
Turkish Cypriots hostage on the pretext that only under its own protection
could their integration be realised ," he said, in an interview with Cyprus
state radio during his recent visit here in his capacity as current
president of the ministerial committee of the Council of Europe.
"At a parallel level, all the arguments which Turkey hitherto used in order
to justify the unjustifiable nature of its intervention...have fallen flat,
and it now finds itself before an impasse to which it reacts in the worst
possible way, with more tensi on, polarisation and antagonism.
First-ever Ombudsman's office in Greece opens
Prime Minister Costas Simitis yesterday officially inaugurated the first-
ever Ombudsman's office in Greece, announcing the appointment of an
assistant ombudsman to handle issues relating to individuals serving in the
armed forces.
Mr. Simitis said the assistant ombudsman would contribute to the better
protection of the fundamental rights of soldiers and would work closely
with Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos, Interior Minister Alekos
Papadopoulos and the new Ombudsman, Nikif oros Diamantouros.
The office of the Ombudsman will open to the public as of Oct. 1 and is
located at 5, Hatziyiannis Mexis St. in Athens.
Parliament debates on the Internet
Parliamentary debates will be broadcast with both image and sound through
Internet as of October, while debates of Parliamentary committees may also
be broadcast very soon.
In a statement yesterday, Parliament President Apostolos Kaklamanis
revealed that Parliament is ready to broadcast debates through Internet,
adding that the creation of television archives containing debates,
speeches and other Parliamentary activities will also commence.
Court rules civil aviation employees strike illegal
An Athens court on Thursday ruled that a four-day, 24-hour rolling strike
called by the Federation of Civil Aviation Employees is "illegal and
abusive".
The court ruling followed recourse by the administration of state-owned
Olympic Airways.
Following the development, the Civil Aviation Authority has notified all
airline companies that flights will continue unimpeded.
On Thursday, the first day of the strike, nine flights were cancelled,
eight of Olympic Aviation and one of Olympic Airways.
Civil aviation 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.
Gov't launches subscriptions for privatisation bonds today
The government today opens subscriptions for an equity convertible bond
launched to aid its privatisation drive and raise around 350 billion
drachmas for state coffers.
The bonds, called prometoha, will be convertible into the equity of firms
to be privatised through the bourse from January 1, 1999.
Handling the issue are National Bank of Greece, Eurobank and Paribas of
France - an expert in Balladur privatisation bonds.
Finance Undersecretary Nikos Christodoulakis has met institutional
investors at home and abroad over the past week in order to promote the
securities.
Book-building for domestic institutional investors will be held on 25-29
September. The deadline for retail investors to subscribe to the public
offer is October 2.
The bonds in electronic form will have a three-year duration and remain tax-
exempt if the original buyer holds them until maturity, or exchanges them
for stock in the listed, privatised companies.
The rate and yield of the bonds will be set on September 29 in line with
bids submitted by institutional investors.
On offer are 170 billion drachmas worth of bonds. Another 50 billion
drachmas of paper will be issued if demand is heavy. The issue date is
October 9, 1998 with expiry on October 9, 2001.
The ministry has said it will not issue new equity convertible bonds in
coming years.
Industrial output, construction rise sharply
Industrial production jumped 8.4 percent in July to show a 5.1 percent
increase in January-July compared with the same period last year, the Greek
National Statistics Service (GNSS) said yesterday.
Construction activity was also sharply higher, rising by 12.7 percent in
June, to show a 10.7 percent increase in January-June of 1998 compared with
the corresponding period of 1997, GNSS said.
Gov't formally submits bourse reform bill to parliament
The government yesterday gave parliament a bill that eases entry for Greek
and foreign firms into the Athens Stock Exchange, making the bourse more
competitive.
The bill's introduction said that the change in legislation was needed due
to introduction of the euro, which would open the Athens bourse to greater
competition from stock markets abroad that often had more favourable entry
requirements.
Government officials have said that the new law will allow better
investment prospects for many domestic firms currently barred from the
market due to current stringent listing requirements.
The authorities held consultations with market players before submitting
the bill, leading to changes in some of the rules originally contained in
the bill.
The overhaul is expected to lead to more listings for firms with growth
potential, spur large domestic or multinational firms to seek entry, and
upgrade the role of the capital markets commission.
The main points of the bill that is destined for parliamentary debate and
then a vote are as follows:
- Application for listing requires the publication of balance sheets for
three consecutive years, which need not show profitability. The current
requirement of five straight years of profitability has been scrapped. For
evaluation are a firm's asset com position and its mid-term prospects for
profitability.
- The asset composition of applicants has to be satisfactory on the basis
of the latest balance sheet, with a floor for equity capital of 2.0 billion
drachmas from one billion currently in force. Before consultations, the
bill originally set 1.5 billion drachmas.
A 25 percent share capital increase is no longer mandatory for entry into
the bourse.
- A company's share distribution on listing will be acceptable if at least
25 percent of share capital is sold to the public, or there are at least 2,
000 shareholders. - The price of a share can vary for sale to different
categories of investors.
It can also be fixed or fluctuate within a range of 15 percent either
way.
- The underwriters of initial public offerings will have the right to
intervene in the market in order to support a stock's price for three
months from the company's date of entry. Before consultations, the time
period was six months.
- For entry into the bourse's parallel market for smaller cap stocks,
companies must have a minimum shareholders' equity of 500 million drachmas
and have published two balance sheets before entry, the latest showing
profits.
They will also have to post high enough profits in the fiscal year before
entry to allow payment of a dividend equivalent to six percent of their
stock's price.
Firms already listed on the parallel market will have to increase their
share capital to 500 million drachmas within the next three years.
Greek stocks jump following Wall Street hopes of US rate cut
Equities ended sharply higher on the Athens Stock Exchange in moderate
trade yesterday following a spectacular rise on Wall Street in the previous
session on hopes of lower US interest rates.
The general index ended 2.23 percent up at 2,188.89 points with turnover at
44.6 billion drachmas.
Sector indices scored gains. Banks rose 2.72 percent, Insurance was 0.74
percent up, Investment increased 1.76 percent, Leasing ended 1.83 percent
higher, Industrials rose 1.82 percent, Construction jumped 2.25 percent,
Miscellaneous ended 1.87 percent up and Holding rose 1.02 percent.
The parallel market index for small cap companies rose 2.07 percent, and
the FTSE/ASE 20 blue chip index gained 2.47 percent to 1,323.17 points.
Broadly, advancers led decliners by 174 to 60 with another 20 issues
unchanged.
National Bank of Greece ended at 40,700 drachmas, Ergobank at 24,400, Alpha
Credit Bank at 22,520, Ionian Bank at 10,460, Hellenic Telecoms at 6,790,
Delta Dairy at 3,190, Intracom at 11,435, Hellenic Petroleum at 2,540 and
Titan Cement at 18,300 drachmas.
Parliament committee okays reduction in tax fines
A Greek parliamentary committee yesterday unanimously adopted an amendment
to a tax bill allowing discounts on fines for overdue taxes.
The amendment offers taxpayers a 50 percent discount on fines if they pay
their debts in a lump sum, and a 15 percent discount if they pay in 30
instalments.
WEATHER
Good weather with scattered cloud will prevail throught Greece today.
Rainfal in the northwest of the country in the afternoon. Winds variable,
light to strong. Athens will be sunny turning to cloudy in the evening with
temperatures between 16-27C. Same in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 15-
25C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 287.908
British pound 484.731 Japanese yen (100) 210.740
French franc 51.032 German mark 171.105
Italian lira (100) 17.312 Irish Punt 428.147
Belgian franc 8.295 Finnish mark 56.207
Dutch guilder 151.746 Danish kr. 44.944
Austrian sch. 24.319 Spanish peseta 2.024
Swedish kr. 36.307 Norwegian kr. 38.321
Swiss franc 206.842 Port. Escudo 1.668
Aus. dollar 167.693 Can. dollar 190.643
Cyprus pound 576.828
(C.E.)
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