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Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 97-06-28

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

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

NEWS IN ENGLISH

Athens, Greece, 28/06/1997 (ANA)


MAIN HEADLINES

  • European socialist finance ministers meet in Athens
  • Delors encourages more meetings among european socialists
  • President Clerides to visit Athens
  • Greece calls for smooth holding of elections in Albania
  • Presidential decrees on illegal immigrants approved by Cabinet
  • Tourism better, but work still to be done
  • Greek ethnic leaders in Albania kidnapped as violence continues
  • US maintains 7:10 aid ratio
  • Tsohatzopoulos speaks to expatriate groups in NY
  • G. Papandreou meets with Australian FM Downer
  • Patriarchate to abstain from Vatican throne celebration
  • Weather
  • Foreign exchange

NEWS IN DETAIL

European socialist finance ministers meet in Athens

Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis told a group of socialist finance ministers from European Union member-states, on Saturday, that the new european architecture should be re-examined taking seriously into consideration the union's pending broader expansion.

The EU socialist ministers are meeting in Athens this weekend to discuss strengthening of the social state, accelerating growth and boosting employment in the EU.

Simitis said the course towards a federal Europe should not ignore the particularities of the smaller states.

Stressing that flexibility should not constitute the main focus, Simitis warned that this would lead to "a concentration of power in the hands of the bigger states."

In short, flexibility would allow some countries to forge ahead of others, adopting specific policies and integrating more closely, without the threat of a veto from an unwilling partner.

The other, more reluctant, partners would be allowed to join in and catch up when they felt ready to do so.

Turning to economic policy related issues, Simitis emphasised the need for social cohesion, adding that the european socialists should focus economic policy on battling nemployment.

He said economic policy should also take into serious consideration the "particularities and sensitivities of the various member-states of the European Union."

Simitis further forecast that Greece would fulfill the criteria for participation in the Economic and Monetary Union in 1998 and would be in a position to participate in the EMU in 2001.

He stressed however that criteria should be the same for all EU member- states.

Greek National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos Papantoniou, who ooganised the meeting, held in the tourist resort of Asteras in the sea- side suburb of Vouliagmeni, told reporters that after achieving majority in Europe, the european socialist finance ministers could now focus on the development of growth-oriented economic policies with emphasis on the creation of jobs and on social protection.

Papantoniou said he hoped that the meeting would produce a text that would serve as "the starting point for better coordination among european socialist parties for a more prosperous and just european society."

He appeared cautious, however, when he said that "we should not nurture extreme expectations from the rise of the socialst parties in Europe."

"We have made a start and we can see positive prospects but a lot of work needs to be done," he added.

Delors encourages more meetings among european socialists

Former European Commission President, Jacques Delors, also attending the European socialist finance ministers' meeting in Athens, told reporters today that Greek National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos Papantoniou's initiative to organise the meeting was "significant."

"European public opinion expects a lot from the socialists, who are now the majority in Europe," Delors said.

Delors, who is currently the president of the research group, "Our Europe," said that in conditions of a globalised economy to which the welfare state needs to be adjusted, european socialists should constantly exchange views and proposal on both national and european levels.

"We had a fruitful discussion but it needs to be followed up," Delors said adding that "further analysis is necessary in order to make a correct assessment of the situation."

"The great challenge for socialists," he said, "is to make the necessary adjustments to the system, without losing the values of freedom, solidarity and personal responsibility."

British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown and French Finance Minister Dominique Strauss-Kahn did not attend the meeting due to other obligations.

President Clerides to visit Athens

Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides is due to visit Athens on Monday for talks with the Greek political leadership in view of the start of pending UN-sponsored proximity talks between the Cyprus government and the Turkish Cypriot leadership in New York.

On the first day of his stay, Clerides will meet with President Costis Stephanopoulos, while on Tuesday he will have a meeting with Prime Minister Costas Simitis.

He is also due to meet with main opposition New Democracy leader Costas Karamanlis and former premier and honorary New Democracy President Constantine Mitsotakis.

Greece calls for smooth holding of elections in Albania

Greece yesterday expressed hope that the national elections tomorrow in neighbouring Albania would lead to a government of wide acceptance that would help restore the country, calling for a smooth holding of elections.

A Foreign Ministry statement released late last night read: "The Greek government believes that the smooth holding of Albanian elections on Sunday is a fundamental prerequisite in promoting the democratic process, the achievement of political and social stability, the respect of human rights and economic development".

"The Greek government hopes that the elections will lead to the formation of a widely accepted government that will undertake effectively the project of restoring the country.

"Greece expresses the belief that the Albanian voters would participate in elections in a peaceful and orderly way", the statement said.

Greece, it said, had undertaken "intensive efforts" on a bilateral and multilateral level to "contribute effectively to international initiatives for helping the smooth holding of the elections".

"The government has also taken specific and fundamental measures" to help Albanian nationals in Greece, including members of the ethnic Greek minority, travel to Albania to vote.

"Our country is prepared to continue its contribution in the future to efforts by the Albanian people to establish a modern, democratic society", it said.

Presidential decrees on illegal immigrants approved by Cabinet

Foreigners and illegal immigrants living and working in Greece will be registered as of September 1, according to two presidential bills approved by the Cabinet yesterday.

The bills were drafted by the labour and social security ministry.

The registration of aliens will take place between September and December of this year, while foreign labourers will be given a temporary residence permit, valid as a work permit also, which will expire on Nov. 30, 1998.

At the same time, an extension period of two months, January to February 1998, will be given for those who need time to submit additional papers.

Following the expiration of the temporary permit and a recommendation by a special prefectural committee, an immigrant will be granted a residence and work permit lasting from one to three years, with the option of renewal every two years.

In order to acquire this second, more lasting card, the decrees call for the following papers: a temporary permit, a passport or other identification, a copy of their work agreement or health insurance booklet, and in cases of special jobs (such as cook ), a health certificate.

According to Labour Minister Miltiadis Papaioannou, there are approximately 450,000 illegal immigrants in Greece today. The measures concern about 200, 000 because labourers originating from countries sharing borders with Greece do not fall under the dec ree. This means an exception for Albanians, Bulgarians, Turks and those from the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

The Cabinet decided to except economic immigrants from neighbouring countries only yesterday, in face of the danger of an influx of refugees. The unstable state in Albania also contributed to this decision, especially in view of the uncertainty in the c oming elections tomorrow.

Following the Cabinet meeting, Mr. Papaioannou said that "the measure's success will depend on its social acceptance". He noted two points especially, that illegal immigrants be convinced to come register and not believe it is a trap, and convince those

Greeks likely to be influenced by xenophobia that these issues cannot be oversimplified.

Tourism better, but work still to be done

Although the Greek National Tourist Organisation (GNTO) is anticipating a 5- 10 per cent increase in foreign tourist arrivals compared to last year, there is no room for complacency due to the structural problems which remain in Greek tourism, GNTO General Secretary Nikos Skoulas said today.

Skoulas was speaking to 300 British reporters, writers and businessmen active in the tourism sector who are participating in a three-day annual conference of the Institute of Travel and Tourism (ITT) which opened this morning.

The GNTO chief assured the conference delegates that ''a new spirit of professionalism'' was now prevailing in Greece, while ''a renewed standard of tourism development'' had been adopted with emphasis on quality rather than low prices.

Skoulas advised tour operators against pressing Greek hoteliers to lower their rates, saying this would only result in a ''vicious circle'' of lower prices-lower quality which in the end left customers unsatisfied.

He also expressed support for the establishment of one or more private Greek airline companies to compete directly with the ''over-protected'' national carrier, Olympic Airways, and urged the speedy liberalisation of airport services, including ground handling.

Greek ethnic leaders in Albania kidnapped as violence continues

Reports from the Albanian city of Gjirocaster Thursday said that Theodoros Bezianis, the former president of the local branch of the ethnic Greek "Omonia" party had been kidnapped near his village of Frastani.

The circumstances of the kidnapping were not immediately clear. Mr. Beziani's daughter, who is standing for election in Sunday's poll as a candidate for the Human Rights Party, insisted that the kidnapping was politically motivated.

Mr. Bezianis, an American citizen, is one of five ethnic Greeks imprisoned in Albania in 1994 on charges of espionage and weapons possession after a gunman killed two Albanian soldiers in a conscript camp near the border.

Their arrest and conviction in August 1994 rekindled a simmering feud between Athens and Tirana over the human rights of the ethnic Greek minority in southern Albania, estimated by Athens at 400,000.

Albanian President Sali Berisha released one of the five on Christmas Eve 1994 and the remaining four - on appeal to Albania's Supreme Court - had their sentences reduced or suspended.

Mr. Bezianis's daughter said her father had been receiving threatening phone calls for the last few days to withdraw his candidacy. Her brother Costas Bezianis is the proprietor of the largest soft drink bottling plant in southern Albania and has also been the target of threats and attacks.

A later report from Ioannina said another ethnic Greek Albanian, Vassilis Kremydas, the president of the Examilia community and brother-in-law of the former president of "Omonia" Sotiris Kyriazatis, had been kidnapped by armed men in Sarande.

The report said the kidnappers had asked for a ransom of 40 million drachmas by today or Mr. Kremydas would be killed.

US maintains 7:10 aid ratio

The US Senate's Appropriations Committee yesterday approved an amendment which maintains the 7:10 ratio in military aid to Greece and Turkey.

The amounts involved are $122.5 million and $175 million dollars respectively, the same as the amounts given in 1997.

At the same time, Cyprus is to continue receiving $15 million annually to be spent on promoting bicommunal programmes and measures to reduce tension and reunite the island.

Tsohatzopoulos speaks to expatriate groups in NY

National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos told representatives of expatriate Greek groups here Thursday night that by influencing the formulation of a common strategy on NATO and EU enlargement, Athens could achieve th e right conditions for promoting its national issues.

Mr. Tsohatzopoulos is visiting the US for talks with high-ranking US officials, which included a meeting with US Defense Secretary William Cohen.

He said that Mr. Cohen displayed a strong interest in the proposals and positions of the Greek government.

"It is a recognised fact that Greece is no longer the peripheral country it was viewed in the '80s, no longer a country pleading with the mighty for help and support, but a force of peace, security, stability and cooperation, " Mr. Tsohatzopoulos said.

The event was organised by the New York Greek Societies' Federatioin in cooperation with the World Council of Hellenes Abroad (SAE).

"We are not viewed as mere spectators any more," he said.

"They want to know our opinion on all the major issues confonting eastern Europe and the Balkans because the situation there is changing and (therefore) giving rise to major destabilising problems," he added.

"There is Bosnia and the problem with Albania. This is precisely why we say that NATO enlargement should not just entail the central European countries, as President Clinton suggests, but that it should also include Romania and Bulgaria," Mr. Tsohatzopo ulos added.

The United States strongly opposed a push by some NATO allies, including France, for quick admission of five eastern European countries instead of only three to membership in the alliance.

"Smaller would be better initially from my respective," Mr. Cohen said during a two-day NATO defence ministers meeting in Brussels on June 12, rejecting calls for a broader expansion. The United States has said that it wanted to invite only Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary to join NATO at a summit in July.

"What is important for us is not whether our role is recognised or whether our soldiers participate in international (peacekeeping) forces," Mr. Tsohatzopoulos continued. What is important, he said, "is what we seek and how we are going to influence dev elopments, regarding either NATO or the creation of an organisation of security and cooperation by the Western European Union, or on the issue of EU enlargement which includes the issue of giving Cyprus a full membership."

"It is our obligation to utilise today's favourable conditions, the International Law, to serve principles and values," Mr. Tsohatzopoulos said, reiterating that Greece would never accept its sovereigh rights to be disputed and adding that the country's defence as well as modernisation of its armed forces posed as the answer to any external threat.

"Greece's active presence to multinational procedures does not necessarily mean that our country would expect from any international organisation to safeguard our national security from Turkish treats," the minister said.

In his address, Mr. Tsohatzopoulos also brought up the issue of Greece's very high budget for defence spending, saying that the entire Greek political leadership supported the budget.

Concluding, he said he supported the UN-sponsored direct talks between Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides and Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash in New York, while expressing optimism over the final solution to the Cyprus issue, "since the prospect fo r a Cyprus-EU accession would lead to new developments given Turkey's strong desire to upgrade its relations with the European Union."

Greece, Mr. Tsohatzopoulos said, had made it clear that it would support Turkey in its effort to achieve closer relations with Europe as long as the neighbouring country conformed with the principles of international law and its international obligations.

G. Papandreou meets with Australian FM Downer

Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou yesterday met Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer, who is on an informal visit to Athens.

The two officials discussed international and bilateral issues, including human rights, EU representation at ceremonies to hand over Hong Kong to the People's Republic of China, environmental protection, etc.

Discussion on bilateral issues also focused on the significant role played by the large expatriate Greek community in Australia, especially in the economic sector. An announcement by the foreign ministry said the two men agreed on the need for a further strengthening of economic relations between the two countries.

Mr. Papandreou also briefed the Australian foreign minister on Greek positions regarding the FYROM name issue.

Earlier in the day, Mr. Downer was received by President of the Republic Kostis Stephanopoulos.

Patriarchate to abstain from Vatican throne celebration

The Ecumenical Patriarchate will not participate this uyear in the Vatican's celebration of the feast day of the Apostles Peter and Paul on Sunday.

The move underlines the dissatisfaction at the Patriarchate over the Vatican's recent position, which led to the cancellation of the Ecumenical Patriarch's participation in the second European Ecumenical Assembly in Graz, Austria, and the subsequent can cellation of the Patriarch's official visit to Austria.

The Phanar made no comment yesterday over the development which, however, the Ecumenical Patriarchate's Synod had indirectly referred to when it announced the cancellation of the Patriarch's visits to Graz and Vienna on May 30.

The Vatican insisted on organising a meeting between Pope John Paul II and the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexiy in Vienna, at the same time Ecumenical Patriarch Vartholomeos was scheduled to be in Austria, a departure in the protocol anticipate d in such cases.

The meeting between the pope and Alexiy was cancelled at the last moment, while the Catholic press criticised Pope John Paul II over his handling of the issue and the ensuing crisis.

The reasons for which they cancelled the meeting (between the pope and Alexiy) "concern the way with which Roman popism understands its role", according to the newspaper "Il Manifesto" (June 6, 1997), while "Republica" (June 23, 1997) spoke of a "consid erable cooling in relations between Rome and the other churches".

The exchange of visits on the throne celebrations of the two churches, Peter and Paul for Rome and Andrew for Constantinople (Istanbul), were among measures decided when the anathemas between the two churches were lifted and dialogue began.

Weather

Sunny weather is forecast throughout the country today. Local clouds are expected in mainland Greece in the afternoon. Winds variable, light to moderate, turning strong in the Aegean Sea. Athens will be mostly sunny. Thessaloniki will be sunny with few clouds in the afternoon.

Foreign exchange

Friday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 270.816 Pound sterling 452.094 Cyprus pd 529.728 French franc 46.439 Swiss franc 187.900 German mark 156.642 Italian lira (100) 16.005 Yen (100) 236.632 Canadian dlr. 196.277 Australian dlr. 202.988 Irish Punt 409.299 Belgian franc 7.593 Finnish mark 52.618 Dutch guilder 139.197 Danish kr. 41.122 Swedish kr. 35.295 Norwegian kr. 37.254 Austrian sch. 22.268 Spanish peseta 1.853 Port. Escudo 1.550

(M.S.)


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