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Macedonian Press Agency: News in English, 98-01-19

Macedonian Press Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Macedonian Press Agency at http://www.mpa.gr and http://www.hri.org/MPA.


MACEDONIAN PRESS AGENCY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Thessaloniki, January 19, 1999

SECTIONS

  • [A] NATIONAL NEWS
  • [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS

  • NEWS HEADLINES

    [A] NATIONAL NEWS

  • [01] STUDENTS TO HOLD ANOTHER ROUND OF RALLIES TODAY
  • [02] DEVELOPMENT MINISTER DEPARTS FOR THE US TOMORROW
  • [03] ESP CONFERENCE TO BEGIN IN THESSALONIKI ON FRIDAY
  • [04] BALKAN PEACEKEEPING FORCE TRAINING CAMP INAUGURATION TOMORROW
  • [05] GREEK PENSIONERS TO CONDUCT MASSIVE RALLY TODAY
  • [06] EUROSTAT: GREECE'S INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION IS STEADILY RISING
  • [07] SIMITIS-ARSENIS MEETING
  • [08] REPRESENTATIVES OF PENSIONERS MET WITH THE PRIME MINISTER
  • [09] REPPAS: THE GOVERNMENT WANTS THE SCHOOLS TO OPEN BEFORE A DIALOGUE STARTS
  • [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS

  • [10] GREEK FOREIGN MINISTER IN SOFIA TODAY, BUCHAREST TOMORROW
  • [11] SOLANA, ALBRIGHT, DON'T RULE OUT MILITARY INTERVENTION IN KOSOVO
  • [12] EUROPEAN COMMISSION REPORT ON GREEK ECONOMY IS "THUMBS UP"
  • [13] GREECE-BULGARIA SIGN ACCORD ON BORDER COOPERATION
  • [14] ROMANIA: POLICE CONCEDE ROADS TO PROTESTING COAL MINERS
  • [15] "HISTORY OF GREECE" IS A BEST SELLER IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
  • [16] PANGALOS' CONTACTS IN SOFIA
  • [17] NEW CLASHES IN KOSOVO

  • NEWS IN DETAIL

    [A] NATIONAL NEWS

    [01] STUDENTS TO HOLD ANOTHER ROUND OF RALLIES TODAY

    Students throughout Greece are to continue with their protests against the education reforms by holding another round of rallies today. At the same time, they continue to occupy about 600 high-schools throughout the country.

    Teachers have joined the protests as their unions have given them the go-ahead to hold two 24-hour strikes on Thursday and Monday.

    The Archbishop of Athens and All of Greece Christodoulos has offered to mediate the fermenting crisis and has appealed to the students that they return to class.

    [02] DEVELOPMENT MINISTER DEPARTS FOR THE US TOMORROW

    The Minister of Development Vaso Papandreou is to embark on an official, eight-day visit to the United States tomorrow.

    During her stay in the US, Ms. Papandreou will have a series of meetings and contacts with US government officials and Greek-American leaders, among them the US Secretary of Energy, assistant Secretary of State, and others.

    She will give an interview to CNN will visit Houston's energy installations.

    On the 25th of January she will attend a luncheon given in her honor by the Foreign Policy Association, at Manhattan's Yale Club. Ms. Papandreou will also be received by the Archbishop of America Spyridon.

    [03] ESP CONFERENCE TO BEGIN IN THESSALONIKI ON FRIDAY

    The "European Socialist Party" is to hold a three-day conference concerning southeastern Europe on Friday in Thessaloniki, featuring the participation of the Party's leader and German Defense Minister Rudolph Scharping, the President of the European Parliament's Socialists Pauline Green and other Socialist leaders from European and Balkan countries.

    Greece's Defense and Foreign Ministers, Akis Tsochatzopoulos and Theodoros Pangalos respectively, will also be present, as well as the ruling PASOK party's central committee secretary Kostas Skandalides.

    [04] BALKAN PEACEKEEPING FORCE TRAINING CAMP INAUGURATION TOMORROW

    The Balkan Peacekeeping Force's training camp, with headquarters in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, is to be inaugurated tomorrow near northern Greece's city of Kilkis.

    The ceremony will be chaired by Defense Misnter Akis Tsochatzopoulos and will be attendee by defense ministers, undersecretaries and chiefs of staffs from Balkan countries and the former Soviet bloc.

    [05] GREEK PENSIONERS TO CONDUCT MASSIVE RALLY TODAY

    In protest to the government's economic and tax policies, Greece's pensioners are to conduct a massive rally in Athens today where they will try to achieve a meeting with the Premier Kostas Simitis.

    Pensioners from Western Macedonian and Thrace are not to take part in Athens' rally as they will hold a similar event in the northern Greek city of Kavala.

    Among the pensioners' demands are an 80% increase of the minimum level of retirement pay and also the indexing of the tax scale.

    [06] EUROSTAT: GREECE'S INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION IS STEADILY RISING

    Greece's industrial production pace has surpassed the median rate noted in the other European Union member-states, ranking among the top three member-states according to Eurostat.

    Specifically, Greece has presented an industrial production increase of 1.3% for the August-October period of 1998, in relation to the immediately preceding quarter. Ireland and Finland rank on top, with a 4.5% and 1.7% respective increase in industrial production.

    The mean overall rate for the EU member-states was .3%. According to Eurostat, Greece's industrial production performance fared even better when the statistics took the actual working days into consideration, ranking it second with an increase of 8.3%.

    [07] SIMITIS-ARSENIS MEETING

    Minister of education Gerasimos Arsenis had a two-hour meeting with prime minister Kostas Simitis today. In statements he made afterwards, the minister pointed out that there is no question for him to resign, while on the meeting with the prime minister he stressed that they had a comprehensive discussion on the developments in the sector of education.

    Meanwhile, the mobilizations of students continue. Main streets were blocked in many big cities across the country. In the island of Rhodes a truck driver injured a student and the teachers' union decided to hold two 24hour strikes on Thursday and Monday.

    [08] REPRESENTATIVES OF PENSIONERS MET WITH THE PRIME MINISTER

    Pensioners from all over Greece gathered at the center of Athens today and held a protest rally expressing their opposition to the revenue and tax policy followed by the government. The pensioners' march ended up outside the prime minister's office and they demanded to have a meeting with him. Mr. Simitis finally met with them and promised the establishment of a ministerial committee to examine their demands. The next meeting of the prime minister with a pensioners' delegation will be held in early February.

    Undersecretary to the prime minister's office Giorgos Paschalides, who also met with the delegation of pensioners stated that the social spending has increased and pointed out that the pensioners are at the center of the government's attention.

    [09] REPPAS: THE GOVERNMENT WANTS THE SCHOOLS TO OPEN BEFORE A DIALOGUE STARTS

    Greek government spokesman Dimitris Reppas stated that there is not an issue of resignation or sacrifice of minister of education Gerasimos Arsenis and at the same time, he issued an appeal to the members of the school community to return to their duties.

    He said that the government wants the schools to open in order for a dialogue to start, while on the Simitis-Arsenis meeting he said that it was a scheduled one during which the education minister briefed the prime minister in detail on the situation in the sector of education.

    [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    [10] GREEK FOREIGN MINISTER IN SOFIA TODAY, BUCHAREST TOMORROW

    Greece's Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos is presently on an official visit to Sofia where he will meet with his Bulgarian counterpart Nadeja Michailova.

    The two officials are to discuss issues concerning the course of agreements already in effect, i.e. the three new border crossings at Exohi, Ehinos and Nimpheon, and the management of the Nestos River waters. He will also be received by Bulgarian President Petar Stoyanov, Premier Ivan Kostov and the Speaker of the House Jordan Sokolov.

    Following his stay in Sofia, Mr. Pangalos will travel to Bucharest where he will have contacts with his Romanian counterpart and other political and state leaders.

    [11] SOLANA, ALBRIGHT, DON'T RULE OUT MILITARY INTERVENTION IN KOSOVO

    The head of OSCE's verification mission in Kosovo William Walker has been expelled from the province by Yugoslav authorities who declared him "persona non grata", provoking the ire of NATO's secretary-general Javier Solana and US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. They both warned that the possibility of military strikes in Kosovo is open.

    NATO chief Wesley Clark is to meet with the President of Yugoslavia Slobodan Milosevic today.

    [12] EUROPEAN COMMISSION REPORT ON GREEK ECONOMY IS "THUMBS UP"

    The European Commission's annual economic report on Greece grants kudos to the Greek state for its exceptionally positive results in reducing the country's public deficit, thereby placing the country on a steady course towards convergence.

    Nevertheless, the report, expected to be issued today, also recommends an intensification of efforts to further reduce inflation and adhere to a tight salaries' policy in order to avoid inflationary pressures.

    Specifically, the report stresses that Greece's growth rate has been on an steadily upward course since 1994, mostly due to the impressive increase of private and public sector investments.

    The Commission estimates that the country's GNP will rise to 3.5% during 1999, mostly due to domestic demand.

    Moreover, the report points out that the privatization program of 1998 has materialized to a great extend and the few exceptions marring the positive impression were due to difficult market conditions.

    [13] GREECE-BULGARIA SIGN ACCORD ON BORDER COOPERATION

    A Greek-Bulgarian accord on border cooperation is to be signed this afternoon in Sofia during the course of the official visit to Bulgaria by a Greek delegation headed by Foreign Misnter Theodoros Pangalos.

    The accord foresees the exchange of information between the two countries' border patrols, mutual combat of illicit trade and drug trafficking, as well as the electronic link-up between Greek and Bulgarian border stations.

    Mr. Pangalos will meet with his Bulgarian counterpart Nadejda Michailova with whom he will discuss regional cooperation and will be briefed on the security standards of the nuclear energy plant in Kozlodui.

    [14] ROMANIA: POLICE CONCEDE ROADS TO PROTESTING COAL MINERS

    Fifteen thousand coal miners in Romania stormed through police roadblocks outside the city of Petrosani and embarked on a 300-mile course to Bucharest, defying government warnings.

    According to the AFP, the police forces tossed tear gas to the miners who managed to push through the security forces and forced them to concede. Police chief Georgi Lupu said that the police decided to allow the miners to continue their march as far as the next town, Bubesti, expecting them to gather to the city's stadium, 200 kilometers north-west of Bucharest in the Carpathian Mountains.

    The miners stormed the roadblock after having spent the night outdoors. They had marched yesterday for 11 hours.

    They have been on a strike for 16 days, demanding a 35- percent wage increase and the cancellation of government plans to close thirty non-profitable plants which would cost the jobs of 6,500 workers.

    Romania's Industry Minister has rejected their demands.

    [15] "HISTORY OF GREECE" IS A BEST SELLER IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC

    The recently-released "History of Greece" is such popular read in the Czech Republic that, after almost a month in the bookstores, it has sold out.

    The book's first edition of 5,000 copies, released on December 21, 1998, had sold like "hot cakes" by January 5 and a second edition is expected by the end of this month.

    It is an 800-page account of Greece's classical age, Byzantine era and modern times.

    The ancient era is abridged in the first chapters, while a lengthier account of the Byzantium follows. It further focuses on the Turkish rule period and gives extensive analyses of developments in post-civil war Greece to date.

    Furthermore, the book provides an array of interesting data concerning Greek-Czech relations and also features an appendix on Greek modern art.

    [16] PANGALOS' CONTACTS IN SOFIA

    Greek foreign minister Theodoros Pangalos, who was on a visit to Bulgaria, met today with his Bulgarian counterpart Nadezda Michailova. The two government ministers discussed issues concerning the course of the implementation of the agreements on the three new border crossings and the management of the waters of Nestos River.

    Also, they discussed international issues of common interest such as the situation in Kosovo and international initiatives aimed at peace and stability in the region of south-eastern Europe, as well as other issues like Bulgaria's Euro-Atlantic orientation.

    In a press conference they gave after their meeting they stated that there was a coincidence of views on all the issues discussed and especially on the Kosovo problem.

    Mr. Pangalos characterized the relations between Greece and Bulgaria as especially friendly and an example of cooperation.

    Ms. Michailova revealed that Mr. Pangalos presented to her a draft text requesting the establishment of a 25kilometer long free zone at the Greek-Bulgarian border. She said that the draft plan will be carefully examined and expressed the certainty that there will be a final agreement. The Bulgarian foreign minister also mentioned that a tripartite meeting of Greece, Bulgaria and Romania will be held in Tseliko Tirnovo in mid May. The meeting, according to Ms. Michailova, will focus on problems concerning the Balkans, while there will be a discussion on issues concerning transportation, tele-communications and infrastructure projects in the three countries.

    Mr. Pangalos, after stating that he invited Ms. Michailova to visit Greece, referred to the crisis in Kossovo. He said that those responsible for the massacre must be brought to justice and be dealt with as criminals.

    Ms. Michailova expressed the concern of the Bulgarian people over the escalation of violence in Kossovo and underlined that Bulgaria expects that the International Court of Justice will intervene. The Bulgarian foreign minister also wondered why the Yugoslav government refuses to accept observers from the neighbouring countries and characterized Belgrade's refusal as an irrational act.

    The Greek foreign minister referred to the issue of the Burgas-Alexandroupolis pipe-line and stressed that he called for progress in its construction. The two ministers also discussed the issue of Bulgaria's accession into NATO and the European Union and once again the Greek government's support in the effort of Bulgaria to become a member of the two organizations was underlined.

    They also discussed the issue of Kozlodui and Mr. Pangalos said that it is not a Greek-Bulgarian problem and that the issue should be discussed by Bulgaria, the European Union and those responsible on nuclear energy.

    Ms. Michailova said that there is a treaty for the exchange of information on nuclear energy and nuclear accidents between Greece and Bulgaria, while she said that Bulgaria is in regular contact with the EU and the European Commission and an investigation by specialists is currently underway in the nuclear plant of Kozlodui. She said that Bulgaria is committed to close reactors 1-4 and said that Kozlodui does not constitute a problem in the Greek-Bulgarian relations.

    [17] NEW CLASHES IN KOSOVO

    New clashes between ethnic Albanian rebels and Serb forces started again in the region Stimlje in Kosovo.

    The verification mission in Kosovo is at risk, according to OSCE president Knut Volembek, after the decision of the Yugoslav authorities to give 48 hours to the head of the mission William Walker to leave the country.


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