Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 97-11-12
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 12/11/1997 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- 1998 budget revealed
- Iraq wants less US control of inspection teams
- President to inaugurate Holocaust memorial in Thessaloniki
- 35% of teachers smoke - study
- Holbrooke cites 'incompatible differences' in Cyprus problem
- Burns sworn in as new US ambassador to Greece
- Mantelis talks with EU Commissioners on telecom issues
- Tsohatzopoulos ends official visit to Hungary
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
1998 budget revealed
National Economy and Finance Minister Yannos Papantoniou today revealed the
details of the 1998 state budget, at a news conference at the General
Accounting Office.
Earlier the Cabinet had unanimously given the budget the green light. It
will be officially submitted to Parliament later today.
The budget foresees a contained 2.5 percent increase in wage increases for
public sector employees in 1998, offset by a full indexation of the tax
scale, by a factor of 5.6 or 5.7 percent, in line with average 1997
inflation. Some 1,750 public sector agencies will be abolished or
merged.
One of the new taxes included in the budget is a special charge on cellular
phones, ranging from 500 to 2000 drachmas, dependent on level of usage. Tax
revenues will come from increased taxes on real estate transactions,
cigarettes, treasury bills and a new stock market transactions tax.
The budget includes special support programmes for 200,000 young unemployed
up to the year 2000 as well as special programmes for working mothers.
The 1:5 ratio of new public sector appointments for public sector
departures will also be enforced next year with the public investment
programme giving special emphasis to the sectors of educaiton, health and
welfare and social insurance.
The budget forecasts inflows of 317 billion drachmas from new tax reforms,
while the indexation of the tax scale is expected to cost the state some 90
billion drachmas.
Low income-earners will also be better off with the restoration of a pre-
1992 withholding tax regime, abolished by the New Democracy government.
Papantoniou stressed that the government's 'hard drachma' policy would
continue and that the country's goal was inclusion in economic and monetary
union on January 1, 2001, a goal, he said, that was "tangible".
The recent monetary crisis, he added, has resulted in the budget containing
higher interest rates on state paper than originally planned.
Papandoniou added that the privatisation of public sector enterprises would
be stepped up to two years from the three originally planned and that 40
percent of bank and business reserves would be taxed at a rate of 17.5
percent.
Iraq wants less US control of inspection teams
Baghdad's goal in barring American members of UN weapons inspections teams
from entering Iraq was aimed at bringing an end to the "American monopoly"
in these teams, Iraqi Ambassador in Athens Issam Khalil told the ANA
today.
The Ambassador referred to a document setting out the Iraqi demands to the
UN Secretary General during talks on November 5-7 in New York.
"We are asking for the equal participation by the five permanent member
states of the Security Council in the monitoring teams. We reject American
control of the teams' activities. We want these teams to act within the
framework of the UN Charter, not to violate our sovereignty or territorial
integrity," he said.
Khalil characterised Washington's stance as negative, irrespective of
Iraq's actions.
"Even though they know that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction, they
create crises in order to maintain the sanctions," he said, adding:
"What Iraq now accepts is the implementation of article 22 of Resolution
687 according to which the UN and the Security Council should, following
the destruction of the weapons by Iraq, lift the sanctions and permit
trade."
He reiterated that the US' U2 aircraft were spy planes and suggested they
be replaced with aircraft from a neutral country.
Asked what Iraq's response would be in this event, Khalil said Iraq had
asked the Security council to act in favour of its integrity and security.
However he did not rule out any other measures Iraq might consider
appropriate.
President to inaugurate Holocaust memorial in Thessaloniki
Jewish dignitaries and other personalities from all over the world will
gather in Thessaloniki later this month for the unveiling of a monument
dedicated to the nearly 50,000 Jews from the northern Greek capital who
lost their lives in the Nazi Holocaust.
The monument, on the corner of Papanastassiou and Nea Egnatia streets, two
of Thessaloniki's main thoroughfares, will be inaugurated by President of
the Republic Kostis Stephanopoulos on Sunday, November 23.
A U.S. delegation will be lead by the chairman of the House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs committee Benjamin Gilman (Rep-NY), while a high-ranking
Israeli delegation will be headed by Minister of Health Yehushua Matsa.
The guests of honour at the event will be the few survivors of the Nazi
camps from Greece still alive today, who number less than 40.
Thessaloniki was historically the home of one of the biggest Jewish
communities before the Nazi occupation, which found haven in the nothern
Greek capital after fleeing the Holy Inquisition in 15th century Spain.
According to a 1940 census, there were about 49,000 Jews living in
Thessaloniki. The number dwindled to 1,950 in 1945, as 46,061 Thessaloniki
Jews were sent off to the Nazi death camps at Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen and
Birkenau over a six-month period in 1943. Fewer than four percent
survived.
Some 86 percent of the Jews - 67,151 people - living throughout all of
Greece before World War II perished in the Nazi camps.
There are an estimated 5,000 Jews currently living throughout Greece, about
1,200 of them in Thessaloniki.
35% of teachers smoke - study
A survey of Greek teachers has revealed that 35 percent of both public and
private school teachers smoke, with half lighting up in class despite 90
percent believing that passive smoking is harmful to health.
The results of the survey, carried out by the Greek Anti-Cancer Association,
were relased today at the 9th Panhellenic Oncology Conference in Athens.
The results show that 39 percent of men and 33 percent of women teachers
smoked on a daily basis, while 42 percent of smokers were between the ages
of 31 and 35; 31 percent were over the age of 45.
The survey was carried out on 1,519 teachers (661 men, 858 women) from all
levels of the education system by questionnaire.
Another 20 percent of smokers said they were not worried by warnings on the
repercussions of smoking while half of those questioned said they had tried
to give up smoking.
The report recommended that ways be sought to change teachers' smoking in
the presence of their pupils.
Holbrooke cites 'incompatible differences' in Cyprus problem
US special presidential envoy for Cyprus Richard Holbrooke said yesterday
that issues causing friction between Greece and Turkey cannot be dealt with
unless the "core issue" (Cyprus question) is dealt with.
He acknowledged that public views of the Greek and Turkish Cypriot sides on
a couple of issues are "incompatible", their disagreements "are very
profound", and urged both community leaders to refocus their attention on
the future and not on the past, th us remaining hostages of the past.
Mr. Holbrooke reiterated the US administration's resolve to work towards a
settlement in Cyprus and said the ongoing peace effort will be continued
"in a less visible level".
The US diplomat conceded that Washington contributed to certain "tragic
events" in the region in the 1960s and the 1970s, saying "we bear certain
responsibility."
Speaking after four hours of talks with Cyprus President Glafcos Clerides
and Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash, the US presidential emissary said
he had "no expectations" from his discussions in Cyprus.
"We have to keep talking to create opportunities, the conversation was
candid and confidential and was conducted in a very positive atmosphere.
This is in my mind a positive fact," he said.
Yesterday's discussions, he added, showed a "willingness to try to address
the problems of the future."
"I know I am talking in what may sound like riddles but I am hopeful," he
said.
Replying to questions, Mr. Holbrooke said "on their publicly stated
positions, the two sides have incompatible positions on two or three
central issues, such as sovereignty, and they have a legacy of mistrust."
The differences between the two sides "are very profound and they range
from very small details like the content of documents to very basic issues
like how to deal with the right of refugees to return."
Defining his task in the peace effort, Mr. Holbrooke said the US believes
this region is "critical to stability for the US national security and the
Europeans."
"We believe that stability is an essential goal in the post cold war period
and in my view the other issues between Greece and Turkey cannot be dealt
with unless Cyprus is dealt with centrally, it is the core issue," Mr.
Holbrooke stressed. Referring to US involvement in this part of the world,
he said "the American history is not entirely clean, there are some things
previous American administrations did in this area, particularly between
mid-1960s and 1974, which I think were shameful."
Cyprus gained independence from Britain in 1960. Three years later clashes
between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities broke out, while Turkish
troops invaded and occupied 37 per cent of Cyprus territory in 1974.
"We bear certain responsibility for our role in contributing to certain
events here which were tragic," he added.
He said he would consult with US ambassadors in Nicosia, Ankara and Athens
as well as the US president and his secretary of state before deciding on
his next steps.
After flying to the Turkish capital from his talks on Cyprus yesterday
afternoon, Mr. Holbrooke said he was not going to make statements regarding
the contents of talks on the island republic.
He made the remark after a meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Ismail Cem
in Ankara, adding that there was an agreement by all parties involved in
the Cyprus talks to avoid statements.
Burns sworn in as new US ambassador to Greece
The new US Ambassador to Greece Nicholas Burns was sworn in at a ceremony
at the State Department on Monday night.
Mr. Burns, who arrives in Athens early December, said his main goals in his
new post would be the continuation of close military cooperation between
the US and Greece, promoting the resolution of Greek-Turkish differences in
the Aegean and a resolution of the Cyprus issue as well as cooperation in
fighting terrorism.
Mantelis talks with EU Commissioners on telecom issues
Transport and Communications Minister Tassos Mantelis had separate meetings
here yesterday with European Union Commissioners Martin Bangemann and Karel
Van Miert regarding cooperation between Athens and the Union in resolving
pending Greek issues.
As the Commission is taking legal action against Greece for delaying
deregulation of the telecommunications market, Mr. Mantelis said that he
did not make any efforts to avert the recourse.
He stressed that within the deadlines provided for by the recourse process,
Greece would have managed to arrange the pending telecoms issue.
The Greek minister, however, admitted that his discussion with Commissioner
Van Miert also touched on several sensitive issues, such as linking mobile
telephony in Greece with international networks without intervention of
Greece's national network.
Commissioner Bangemann told Mr. Mantelis that he was planning to visit
Athens in May and he hoped that by then, many of the pending issues will
have been settled.
Tsohatzopoulos ends official visit to Hungary
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos wound up his official two-day
visit here yesterday, saying acceptance and respect for international law
and treaties was a required precondition to safeguard security, stabili ty
as well as cooperation in eastern Europe.
Mr. Tsohatzopoulos further stressed that the same preconditions applied
also for the case of Turkey, as far as upgrading its relations with Europe
was concerned.
The Greek minister described as a very positive coincidence the fact that
his visit to Budapest was made at a time when Hungary was requesting NATO
membership, and also preparing to seek an equal place into the European
Union.
In the sector of security and defence, Greece and Hungary decided to
exchange expertise - at military and technical levels - on the armaments
sector.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy weather is expected throughout Greece today with the
possibility of light rain in the northwest. Local fog in the morning. Winds
will be variable, moderate to gale force. Partly cloudy in Athens with
spells of sunshine and mild southerly winds. Temperatures between 13-22C.
Same in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 12-17C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Tuesday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 265.886
Pound sterling 453.820 Cyprus pd 529.728
French franc 46.473 Swiss franc 190.821
German mark 155.625 Italian lira (100) 15.875
Yen (100) 212.705 Canadian dlr. 189.075
Australian dlr. 185.603 Irish Punt 406.125
Belgian franc 7.545 Finnish mark 51.663
Dutch guilder 138.067 Danish kr. 40.890
Swedish kr. 35.563 Norwegian kr. 38.083
Austrian sch. 22.112 Spanish peseta 1.842
Port. Escudo 1.525
(M.P.)
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