Browse through our Interesting Nodes about Greek Art & Culture Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923) Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923)
HR-Net - Hellenic Resources Network Compact version
Today's Suggestion
Read The "Macedonian Question" (by Maria Nystazopoulou-Pelekidou)
HomeAbout HR-NetNewsWeb SitesDocumentsOnline HelpUsage InformationContact us
Thursday, 21 November 2024
 
News
  Latest News (All)
     From Greece
     From Cyprus
     From Europe
     From Balkans
     From Turkey
     From USA
  Announcements
  World Press
  News Archives
Web Sites
  Hosted
  Mirrored
  Interesting Nodes
Documents
  Special Topics
  Treaties, Conventions
  Constitutions
  U.S. Agencies
  Cyprus Problem
  Other
Services
  Personal NewsPaper
  Greek Fonts
  Tools
  F.A.Q.
 

Athens News Agency: Daily News Bulletin in English, 99-04-09

Athens News Agency: Daily News Bulletin in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Athens News Agency at <http://www.ana.gr/>

CONTENTS

  • [01] Athens backs joint EU statement on Kosovo crisis,sets out six goals
  • [02] Cyprus' Kyprianou to mediate for three US soldiers' release
  • [03] Gov't comments on Cook statements citing Milosevic assets in Greece
  • [04] Athens supports EU recommendation towards Contact Group on Yugoslavia
  • [05] Greek banks donate to humanitarian effort
  • [06] Harvard conference on literary inspiration from Greece
  • [07] Planes carrying refugees to use Corfu airport for refuelling
  • [08] Stocks rise again on hopes of political solution for Kosovo
  • [09] Trade deficit rises in 1998
  • [10] Telestet reports 105 pct jump in connections
  • [11] New National Bank of Greece shares to trade Tues
  • [12] Equities end volatile week higher
  • [13] Athens Foreign Exchange

  • [01] Athens backs joint EU statement on Kosovo crisis,sets out six goals

    LUXEMBOURG, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Athens yesterday joined its EU partners in strongly supporting NATO air strikes against Yugoslavia, although it also set out six points of its own for reducing tension in the troubled Balkans.

    "In the face of extreme and irresponsible policies...the use of the severest measures, including military action, has been both necessary and warranted," a joint statement by the Union's 15 foreign ministers stated.

    "The EU holds personally responsible all those who propagated, allowed and executed the crude campaign of violent displacement, tortures and murders, and will support all efforts with a view to forcing them to appear before the International Penal Court for the former Yugoslavia," the statement added.

    On his part, Greek FM George Papandreou tabled a statement during the meeting clarifying Greece's positions on the Kosovo issue.

    Mr. Papandreou said Greece did not distance its position from the joint communique issued by the "15", which it voted for, but supported the following targets strongly and actively, including:

    Achievement of an immediate ceasefire, an end to violence and the undertaking of efforts for a peaceful solution to the problem.

    Effective handling of the huge humanitarian problems created by the hundreds of thousands of refugees.

    Economic aid for the countries most affected in the region to enable them to tackle the immediate problems created by the crisis.

    Adoption of a medium-term and long-term programme for handling the region's political and economic problems.

    The undertaking of a major regional cooperation initiative in the sectors of security, consolidation of democratic institutions and economic restructuring.

    Active support for all efforts for the safeguarding and strengthening of the stability of countries in the region.

    Mr. Papandreou added that Greece, together with Bulgaria and Romania, will coordinate efforts in support of regional cooperation, and pointed out that some of the existing ideas will be raised for discussion at a NATO foreign ministers' summit, due to convene in Brussels on Monday.

    Refugees : On the question of the admission of Kosovo refugees into the country, Mr. Papandreou said Greece, as is the case with the other EU member-states, has not undertaken any specific commitment at a Union level. He further noted that the issue will be a subject of consultations in bilateral contacts Greece will have with Balkan countries, primarily with the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM).

    Athens News Agency

    [02] Cyprus' Kyprianou to mediate for three US soldiers' release

    BELGRADE, 09/04/1999 (ANA - M. Mouratidis/CNA)

    Cypriot House Speaker Spyros Kyprianou landed here yesterday afternoon in advance of scheduled talks with Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic today.

    His arrival marked the first time the airport opened since the start of the NATO bombings. Mr. Kyprianou, the acting president of Cyprus, landed at Belgrade airport on board a Hellenic Air Force C-130 transport plane.

    In a brief statement to reporters, Mr. Kyprianou said the visit was an effort to deal with humanitarian issues, meaning the release of three US soldiers held captive.

    "We desire, due to good and friendly relations, to be able to add a small stone to this process and I hope, rather, I am certain, that the climate in the talks will be friendly and the talks will be constructive," he said, adding that he hopes his missi on will meet with a positive response.

    Reppas : Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas yesterday said he was optimistic over Mr. Kyprianou's initiative, but added that this optimism should not be excessive "because we do not know the circumstances under which talks will be held for the release of the thr ee US soldiers".

    Mr. Reppas said the Greek government welcomed the initiative.

    "There is hope that the initiative will succeed and if it does, it will have a positive effect," he said. The Greek spokesman also said Athens had put forward the idea for a ceasefire during the Orthodox Easter over the weekend and had also conveyed to Belgrade, through the Yugoslav ambassador in Athens, that the release of the three US soldiers would be a positive move.

    Asked to comment on the fact that the Yugoslav government chose Cyprus to discuss the release of the three US servicemen, Mr. Reppas said Nicosia and Belgrade had traditionally enjoyed good relations within the Non-Aligned Movement while, in addition, Cyprus was not a NATO member.

    Meanwhile, a spokesman for Mr. Kyprianou told CNA by phone from Belgrade that the Cypriot politician was due to attend an official dinner in his honour, hosted by his Yugoslav counterpart, last night.

    The three US soldiers, Andrew Ramirez, Christopher Stone and Steven Gonzales were captured on March 31 by Yugoslav security forces.

    US reaction : On its part, Washington declined from taking a position on the initiative, stressing however, that their release should be "unconditional".

    "Our ambassador in Greece and our embassy in Cyprus are talking to the relevant governments and we have been informed of their intentions, and we are not going to take a position of this," US State Department spokes-man James Rubin told the press on Wed nesday.

    Both Mr. Rubin and White House spokesman Joe Lockhart repeated US claims that there was "no basis" for holding the three soldiers in the first place and described their capture as "illegal".

    Athens News Agency

    [03] Gov't comments on Cook statements citing Milosevic assets in Greece

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    The Greek government said yesterday with respect to Yugovlav President Slobodan Milosevic that any foreign national was entitled to own property in Greece, provided such ownership was not in violation of the country's laws.

    Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas made the statement in reply to reporters' questions about Mr. Milosevic's assets in Greece.

    The questions followed accusations on Wednesday by British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook that Mr. Milosevic had "sucked out" wealth from Serbia "during the same years (the Serbian people) have been impoverished," and that most of it had found its way to assets in Greece.

    Athens News Agency

    [04] Athens supports EU recommendation towards Contact Group on Yugoslavia

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Greece said yesterday it agreed with and supported the recommendation of the European Union's German presidency to the six-nation Contact Group on Yugoslavia concerning efforts to resolve the crisis in Kosovo.

    Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said the EU presidency would again put forward the recommendation at the forthcoming General Affairs Council.

    Mr. Reppas said the recommendation provides for the cessation of ethnic cleansing operations, the withdrawal of the Yugoslav army and security forces from Kosovo, the return of refugees and the convening of the UN Security Council leading to a resolutio n on the deployment of a UN peacekeeping force.

    The spokesman said NATO foreign ministers would hold an informal meeting on Monday to review developments in Kosovo and put forward views regarding the settlement of the problem and how best to tackle the refugee issue.

    For the first time, he said, thoughts may be expressed about the use of ground troops, which Greece opposes.

    Athens News Agency

    [05] Greek banks donate to humanitarian effort

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    The Union of Greek Banks (EET) has donated 300 million drachmas to the Greek government as a contribution to the humanitarian task undertaken by Athens to meet the needs of refugees from Kosovo. An EET delegation, including the Union's President Theodoro s Karatzas, was received by Prime Minister Costas Simitis yesterday for this purpose.

    In a statement afterwards, noted that "the refugees concern us because human misery and human pain concern us. Because if we help, if we offer our solidarity, then we also help friendship between peoples, cooperation, we help a peaceful future in the Balkans."

    Athens News Agency

    [06] Harvard conference on literary inspiration from Greece

    BOSTON, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    The tradition of Hellenism, as espoused by Lord Byron, Henry Miller and James Merrill, among others, will be at the forefront at an international conference focusing on Greece, scheduled to take place at Harvard between April 16-17.

    Entitled "The Spirit of Greece Inspires," the conference is aimed at promoting Greece as a country which inspires foreign writers.

    Divided into two sections, its first day deals with the relation between writers and mythical Greece, while the second day focuses on the relationship between journalists with the Greece of reality. The event is organised by Harvard University's Seferis Faculty, the Socrates Kokkalis programme at Harvard's John F. Kennedy College and the literary magazines Harvard Review (Cambridge) and Mondo Greco (Boston). Sponsors include the culture ministry and the Socrates Kokkalis Foundation.

    Athens News Agency

    [07] Planes carrying refugees to use Corfu airport for refuelling

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    A turbo-prop plane carrying 25 Kosovar refugees headed to Iceland landed at Corfu airport late last night and was still stranded there as a woman in the group was taken to hospital with heart problems, police said.

    The plane picked up the refugees from Skopje after delivering medical relief supplies.

    The Icelandic coastguard's Fokker 27 aircraft eventually departed at 11:30 a.m. without the elderly woman, who remained for treatment at a Corfu hospital.

    The woman's daughter also remained on Corfu together with a citizen of Iceland of Yugoslav origin who offered to act as an interpreter.

    According to press sources, aircraft carrying Kosovar refugees will frequently be using Corfu airport to refuel.

    Meanwhile, a company of Hellenic Army engineers will arrive in the Albanian town of Pogradec today to help prepare a camp which will receive thousands of refugees from war-torn Kosovo, government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said yesterday.

    He said the company, numbering a few dozen engineers, will also be accompanying a shipment of tents, foodstuffs, clothing and other aid for the refugees.

    In addition, he said, a Hellenic Navy landing vessel will arrive tomorrow in the Albanian port of Durres with a shipment of humanitarian aid.

    Replying to reporters' questions, Mr. Reppas said Greece had refused to accept even one Kosovar refugee following the failure of European countries to agree on a joint position on the problem.

    He categorically stated that Greece was at the forefront of efforts to send humanitarian aid to Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and Yugoslavia.

    Humanitarian aid totalling 130 million drachmas in foodstuffs, divided into 10,000 individual packages, is being gathered at the initiative of entrepreneurs in northern Greece.

    Each package contains tinned food, flour, rice, sugar, lentils, beans, marmalade, halva, merenda, salt, coffee, almonds, toilet paper and even nylon bags.

    Athens News Agency

    [08] Stocks rise again on hopes of political solution for Kosovo

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Equities yesterday moved higher for the second consecutive session on the Athens Stock Exchange supported by hopes of a political solution in the Kosovo crisis.

    The general index ended 2.43 percent higher at 3,621.53 points, off the day's highs.

    Its losses since the beginning of NATO air strikes in Yugoslavia are now 3.79 percent compared with 13.0 percent a week ago. Turnover was 134.215 billion drachmas and volume 22,804,539 shares. Traders expect the market gradually to become more stable following its recent wild swings.

    Sector indices scored gains across the board.

    Banks rose 2.82 percent, Leasing ended 2.35 percent higher, Insurance increased 1.65 percent, Investment jumped 3.43 percent, Construction rose 3.51 percent, Industrials were 1.75 percent up, Miscellaneous ended 2.28 percent higher and Holding rose 0.52 percent.

    The parallel market index for small cap companies rose 3.7 percent with 16 stocks hitting the day's 8.0 percent limit up.

    Broadly, advancers led decliners by 247 to 33 with another 12 issues unchanged.

    Thessaliki, Hellenic Telecoms, Boutaris, Strintzis and National Bank were the most heavily traded stocks.

    A total of 47 shares hit the day's 8.0 percent limit up. Among them were Piraeus Bank, Macedonia-Thrace Bank, Xiosbank, Delta Dairy, Cambas, Atemke, GEK, Fanco and Tasoglou.

    Development Invest, Veterin, Ionian Hotels, Boutaris, Intertyp, Xylemporia, Sato, St.George Mills and Attikat suffered the heaviest losses.

    National Bank of Greece ended at 23,340 drachmas, Alpha Credit Bank at 23, 600, Ergobank at 24,990, Ionian Bank at 19,800, Titan Cement at 24,690, Hellenic Petroleum at 2,480, Intracom at 19,710, Minoan Lines at 7,300, Panafon at 8,295 and Hellenic Telecoms at 7,140.

    Financial markets brighter with players opening new positions : Domestic financial markets regained some optimism yesterday supported by hopes of an end to the war in Yugoslavia.

    Traders said the investors had discounted positive developments in Kosovo and started opening new positions in the drachma and state securities.

    Long-term bond prices rose by 50-60 basis points taking the yield spread with German bunds to 186 basis points, down from 192 the previous day.

    In the foreign exchange market the drachma rose against the euro to end at 324.580 versus the euro at the central bank's daily fix from 326.960 a day earlier.

    The US dollar was fixed at 300.080 drachmas from 300.740 the previous day.

    In the interbank market, most money rates remained stable with the exception of one-month and 12-month rates which fell to 10.0 and 9.30 percent respectively.

    Athens News Agency

    [09] Trade deficit rises in 1998

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Greece's trade deficit rose by 328.4 million US dollars in 1998, up 2.2 percent from the previous year.

    The figures exclude services and non-registered transactions. Imports in 1998 totalled 26.185 billion dollars from 26.427 billion in 1997, a drop of 0.9 percent.

    Imports, however, were 7.2 percent higher in drachma terms.

    Exports shrank to 10.592 billion dollars in 1998 from 11.161 billion the previous year, down 5.1 percent in dollars terms but 2.7 percent up in drachmas.

    Athens News Agency

    [10] Telestet reports 105 pct jump in connections

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Stet Hellas, one of the country's three mobile phone operators, yesterday reported an increase of 105 percent in new connections in the first quarter against the same period of last year.

    In January-March, the company acquired 108,687 new subscribers against 52, 908 a year ago, taking the total of subcribers to 797,301.

    Of the total, 56 percent of customers have contracts with the company and 44 percent have the firm's card phone.

    Athens News Agency

    [11] New National Bank of Greece shares to trade Tues

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    New shares of National Bank of Greece, a blue chip on the Athens bourse, are to start trading on Tuesday, the bank said in a statement yesterday.

    The shares are part of a 170.5 billion drachma share capital increase involving the issue of 14,843,024 new common shares at a nominal value of 1, 450 each.

    Of the total, 14,160,698 shares are for preference distribution to existing shareholders at one new for 10 old. The price is 11,500 drachmas.

    Trade will start on Tuesday when preference rights end.

    Athens News Agency

    [12] Equities end volatile week higher

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    The Athens bourse this week recovered from negative sentiment over the Kosovo crisis to focus more on economic fundamentals.

    In the week's three last sessions the market discounted a political solution to the turmoil in Yugoslavia, with the sharpest rise on Wednesday, when the market jumped 7.13 percent.

    Foreign investors have not lose their confidence in the domestic economy, which they see as inexorably heading for entry into the European Union's euro zone.

    Institutional investors abroad have not liquidated their positions in either equities or bonds, and the money market is unruffled.

    In addition, two auctions of state securities brought lower yields in line with expectations that consumer price inflation will continue to fall.

    The general index gained 318.04 points, or 9.63 percent on the week, to finish at 3,621.53 points against 3,303.49 points a week ago.

    Since the beginning of the year, the market has gained 32.29 percent.

    Turnover in the week's four sessions before Orthodox Good Friday was 435.218 billion drachmas to post a daily average of 108.8 billion drachmas, down from 160.1 billion in the previous week.

    The sector scoring the greatest percentage gain was Banking at 12.92 percent. No sectors showed losses.

    Athens News Agency

    [13] Athens Foreign Exchange

    Athens, 09/04/1999 (ANA)

    Bank of Greece closing rates of: April 8, 1999

    Parities in Drachmas

    Banknotes             Buying  Selling
    US Dollar             297.679 304.581
    Can.Dollar            198.995 203.609
    Australian Dlr        186.079 190.394
    Pound Sterling        477.688 488.763
    Irish Punt            408.835 418.314
    Pound Cyprus          557.742 570.674
    Pound Malta           712.287 741.966
    Turkish pound (100)     0.071   0.074
    French franc           49.086  50.224
    Swiss franc           201.822 206.502
    Belgian franc           7.982   8.167
    German Mark           164.627 168.444
    Finnish Mark           54.153  55.409
    Dutch Guilder         146.110 149.497
    Danish Kr.             43.342  44.347
    Swedish Kr.            35.930  36.763
    Norwegian Kr.          38.337  39.226
    Austrian Sh.           23.399  23.942
    Italian lira (100)     16.629  17.014
    Yen (100)             246.423 252.136
    Spanish Peseta          1.935   1.980
    Port. Escudo            1.606   1.643
    
    Foreign Exchange      Buying  Selling
    New York              297.679 304.581
    Montreal              198.995 203.609
    Sydney                186.079 190.394
    London                477.688 488.763
    Dublin                408.835 418.314
    Nicosia               557.742 570.674
    Paris                  49.086  50.224
    Zurich                201.822 206.502
    Brussels                7.982   8.167
    Frankfurt             164.627 168.444
    Helsinki               54.153  55.409
    Amsterdam             146.110 149.497
    Copenhagen             43.342  44.347
    Stockholm              35.930  36.763
    Oslo                   38.337  39.226
    Vienna                 23.399  23.942
    Milan                  16.629  17.014
    Tokyo                 246.423 252.136
    Madrid                  1.935   1.980
    Lisbon                  1.606   1.643
    
    Athens News Agency

    Athens News Agency: Daily News Bulletin in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article
    Back to Top
    Copyright © 1995-2023 HR-Net (Hellenic Resources Network). An HRI Project.
    All Rights Reserved.

    HTML by the HR-Net Group / Hellenic Resources Institute, Inc.
    ana2html v2.01 run on Friday, 9 April 1999 - 7:20:12 UTC