Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-12-29
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 29/12/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Clerides confers with Simitis, heads back to Nicosia
- Cypriot socialist leader comments on S-300 missiles
- Two foreign bank branches in Piraeus bombed
- 17 illegal immigrants' deportion stayed
- Man charged with frenzied murder of grandmother
- Interest rates on the way down
- Petroleum products unit opened
- Equities end slightly lower
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Clerides confers with Simitis, heads back to Nicosia
Cyprus President Glafcos Clerides left for Nicosia today immediately after
concluding talks with Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis on the deployment
of Russian S-300 missiles in Cyprus. Clerides and Simitis held a 90-minute
meeting, but neither made any comments on the contents of the talks. The
Cypriot head of state immediately left for the airport and flew back to
Nicosia where he will convene a meeting of the all-party National Council
on the issue. According to the Cyprus Radio (RIK) correspondent in Athens,
announcements will be issued simultaneously in Athens and Nicosia shortly
after this afternoon's meeting of Cyprus' National Council at which the
final decision on the missiles will be taken.
Cypriot socialist leader comments on S-300 missiles
The leader of Cyprus' Socialist party EDEK, Vasso Lyssarides, said on
Tuesday that Greece was advising Nicosia to change its decision to install
the S-300 missiles, not because it might lead to war with Turkey but
because it would negatively affect the prospects of full EU membership for
Cyprus. EDEK is a junior partner in the Cypriot coalition government and
holds the defence ministry portfolio. According to an ANA despatch from
Nicosia, Lyssarides added that it would be naive to believe that Cyprus'
accession prospects were so fragile that they would be destroyed by the
deployment of a defensive weapons system.
Two foreign bank branches in Piraeus bombed
An anarchist group calling itself the "Revolutionary Nuclei" has claimed
responsibility for two powerful time-bombs that shattered two foreign-owned
banks in the nearby port-city of Piraeus shortly after midnight on Monday,
causing damage but without casualties, police said today. The explosions
caused by the home-made devices went off outside the entrance of a five-
storey building which housed the American Express Bank which recently moved
to another location, but the bank's sign was still there. An anonymous
caller telephoned a private radio station and an afternoon newspaper
informing them of the explosions before they went off.
17 illegal immigrants' deportion stayed
A Samos court decided on Tuesday not to order the deportation of 17 illegal
refugees from Iraq who were ferried to Icaria by a Turk on Christmas Day,
pending a decision by the Greek foreign ministry on their request for
political asylum. The 17 adults were dropped off on Icaria together with 20
children who were not required to appear in court. The reasoning for the
court's decision was that the 17 Iraqis were protected by provisions of the
1951 UN Convention on Refugees, which Greece has signed. In early December,
the UN refugee agency expressed concern about the fate of asylum seekers in
Greece, saying that some were being deported without even having a chance
to apply for asylum.
Man charged with frenzied murder of grandmother
A 29-year-old man was charged with the brutal murder of his elderly
grandmother on Tuesday, after the woman was found dead early on Monday with
more than 30 stab wounds. Police said Leonidas Afthonidis attacked his
grandmother, Urania Patsarika, 72, in the early hours of Monday with two
knives. Three of the wounds the woman suffered - two to the throat and one
to the liver - were fatal. An autopsy revealed some 30 entry points. The
woman had been attacked in the head, chest and abdomen. The attack was so
frenzied, a coroner said, that one of the knives broke. According to
reports, Afthonidis is being treated for behavioural problems and is
receiving medication.
Interest rates on the way down
Greek long-term interest rates will accelerate their decline in 1999 to
converge with eurozone rates, Finance Undersecretary Nikos Christodoulakis
said. He forecast that 10-year state bond yields will drop to 5.2 percent
by the end of 1999 from 7.12 percent currently, achieving the long-term
interest rate criterion to participate in European Economic and Monetary
Union. Announcing the government's state securities issuing programme for
the first two months of 1999, Christodoulakis said that next Monday and
Tuesday the finance ministry will offer to investors tax-free deposit bonds
of two-year duration, yielding 10 percent from 10.3 percent in the
previous issue.
Petroleum products unit opened
Greek Development Minister Vasso Papandreou today inaugurated a new
petroleum products unit in Hellenic Petroleum's refinery facilities in
Aspropyrgos. The Total Isomerism Unit, worth five billion drachmas,, is the
first of a series of projects promoted by Hellenic Petroleum to develop a
new environment-friedly range of oil products in the framework of Auto-oil
I programme to be implemented in 1999.
Equities end slightly lower
Greek equities ended slightly lower on Tuesday as profit taking reversed a
six-day advance of prices on the Athens Stock Exchange. The general index
ended 0.21 percent off to 2,665.12 points after gaining 7.6 percent in the
previous six sessions. Traders said the market needed a correction to let
some steam off the year-end rally. Turnover was heavy at 100.7 billion
drachmas with turnover at 18,966,000 shares. The parallel market index for
small cap companies rose 0.41 percent. The FTSE/ASE 20 index fell 0.35
percent to 1,680.85 points.
WEATHER
Greece will be overcast today with sunny spells and the possibility of
scattered showers in Crete and the Dodecanese Islands and slightly higher
temperatures throughout the country. Northerly winds, light to moderate, in
the Aegean and central Greece. Athens will be partly cloudy with temperatures
ranging from 4C to 13C. Same in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 3C to
6C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Tuesday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 279.476
British pound 468.581 Japanese yen (100) 241.225
French franc 49.679 German mark 166.492
Italian lira (100) 16.868 Irish Punt 413.267
Belgian franc 8.081 Finnish mark 54.828
Dutch guilder 148.031 Danish kr. 43.985
Austrian sch. 23.803 Spanish peseta 1.966
Swedish kr. 34.853 Norwegian kr. 36.571
Swiss franc 204.025 Port. Escudo 1.627
Aus. dollar 170.376 Can. dollar 180.544
Cyprus pound 563.456
(M.P.)
|