Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 97-11-23
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 23/11/1997 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Greece arrests fugitive wanted by Italy in Aldo Moro killing
- Holocaust monument unveiled in Thessaloniki
- Greece must further tighten economy, Economist annual report says
- EU employment measures criticised by Coalition Euro-MP
- Deputy Finance Minister pledges steady drachma parity
- Police serving at embassy in Sofia charged with drug trafficking
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Greece arrests fugitive wanted by Italy in Aldo Moro killing
A 45-year-old Italian fugitive convicted in Italy of involvement in the
1978 abduction and murder of former prime minister Aldo Moro has been
arrested in Aktio, Preveza, northwestern Greece, police announced
today.
The man, identified as Enrico Aristeidis Bianco, was sentenced in absentia
to 10 years imprisonment for complicity in the Moro killing, was arrested
Saturday at Aktio, where he was living on a yacht, police said.
They said Bianco, who was living in Greece under the name Fulvio Folini and
had a forged passport in that name, also had an apartment in Athens.
He was picked up on a warrant issued by an Athens court.
Police said Bianco would be interrorgated by the anti-terrorist service in
Athens and procedures would be instigated for his extradition to Italy.
Holocaust monument unveiled in Thessaloniki
President of the Republic Costis Stephanopoulos on Sunday unveiled a
monument in Thessaloniki dedicated to the nearly 50,000 Jews from the
northern Greek capital, about 96 percent of the Jewish population of the
city at the time, who perished in the Nazi concentration camps.
President Stephanopoulos, Prime Minister Costas Simitis in a message to the
ceremony delivered by Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou, and
Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos spoke of the new Europe being built,
far removed from the barbarity of the past, in which racism and the
ideology of fascism had no place, while a message from U.S. President Bill
Clinton said the Thessaloniki monument would stand as a reminder of the
past evil but also as an inspiration for future good.
The ceremony was attended by a large Israeli delegation headed by Health
Minister Yehoshua Matsa, who hails from a historic Jewish family that has
roots in the Greek city of Ioannina, German Deputy Foreign Minister Werner
Hauer, Greek Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos and Alternate Foreign
Minister George Papandreou, Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos, Macedonia-
Thrace Minister Philippos Petsalnikos, a U.S. Congressional delegation
headed by House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee chairman
Benjamin Gilman, the president of the Jewish community of Thessaloniki A.
Seficha, president of the Central Jewish Council of Greece Nissim Mais
and other dignitaries.
The monument shows a tangle of human skeletons beneath a burning menora --
the candelabra used in Jewish worship. It was crafted by Yugoslav Jew
sculptor Nador Gild, who created similar Holocaust memorials in Jerusalem,
Belgrade and the Nazi concentration camp Dachau. It stands at the crossroad
of Nea Egnatia and Alexandros Papanastasiou streets in central Thessaloniki.
Greece must further tighten economy, Economist annual report says
Greece has to tighten its economy further in order to enter European
economic and monetary union, the Economist business magazine said in an
annual report on 61 countries.
Consumer price inflation should hold around 5.0 percent in 1998 against 5.8
percent in 1997, still double the European Union average, the report
said.
The fiscal deficit is falling but next year may still exceed 3.0 percent of
gross domestic product, which is the criterion for EMU entry under the
Maastricht Treaty.
The deficit is likely to drop to 4.0 percent of GDP in 1998 against 5.0
percent in 1997, the Economist said.
Growth is forecast to remain steady at a 3.0 percent rate of increase in
1998 from 3.1 in 1997 and 2.6 percent in 1996.
According to the Economist, exports are likely to suffer next year due to
the drachma's parity.
Forecast for 1998 are 169 drachmas to the mark and 280 drachmas to the
dollar.
Construction projects are expected to accelerate next year, spurred by the
2004 Olympics, which Athens will host.
Both the socialist government and private sector will be eager to speed up
infrastructure projects needed for the Games, the report said.
EU employment measures criticised by Coalition Euro-MP
Greek Eurodeputy Alekos Alavanos has criticised measures adopted by a
European Union summit to boost jobs as futile in the face of mass
unemployment in the 15-nation bloc.
In an interview to ERA 3 state radio on Saturday, Alavanos said the methods
agreed to spur employment among the young and long-term jobless kept
policies in place that had so far served to create widespread unemployment.
"Annual subsidies of 150 million Ecu against unemployment agreed at the
Luxembourg summit represent 7.5 Ecu a year, or 2,500 drachmas, for each of
the 20 million EU unemployed, and that is the same price as a kilo of meat,
" said Alavanos, who is a member of the Coalition of the Left and
Progress.
Last week's summit had also failed to make the unemployment rate a
criterion for EU members to join economic and monetary union, and a 35-hour
working week had not been adopted, Alavanos said.
Deputy Finance Minister pledges steady drachma parity
Greece's socialist government will keep the drachma's parity steady until
the country joins European economic and monetary union, Deputy Finance
Minister George Drys said.
Addressing a ruling PASOK party economy seminar in Crete late on Saturday,
Drys was apparently trying to quell market rumours of a one-off devaluation
of the drachma this year or in the first half of 1998.
He outlined the success of monetary authorities in warding off speculative
attacks on the drachma in a recent round of market turmoil, mainly by
hiking interbank rates and intervening in the foreign exchange market.
Police serving at embassy in Sofia charged with drug trafficking
A Piraeus public prosecutor late on Saturday brought criminal charges
against two police officers for drug trafficking, possession and use after
the men were caught allegedly trying to carry out street sales of
hashish.
The police officers were suspended from duty following separate arrests
within minutes by the Attica drugs squad in the same part of Piraeus
earlier on Saturday. Public Order Minister George Romeos called the
suspension.
The officers, who were believed by police to be working together on the
drug sales, were identified as Nikea station seargeant Yannis Kouvatsos and
constable Vassilis Moutsakos, currently serving in Greece's embassy in
Sofia, Bulgaria.
Six other men arrested in the same operation as customers were charged with
buying and using drugs. Among them were two Hellenic Navy petty officers
identified as Thodoros Avgouleas and Manolis Piliouras.
All eight were remanded in custody and will appear before an investigating
magistrate on Tuesday.
The six reportedly confessed to buying hashish from Kouvatsos, who claimed
during interrogation the substance was for his own use, police sources
said.
Arresting officers found Kouvatsos in possession of precision sales and 24
grams of hashish during a search, which the sergeant had initially resisted
requesting solidarity from colleagues. He was restrained after allegedly
trying to dump seven grams of the substance, the sources said.
The police force will conduct an internal enquiry under oath to see if the
two should be charged in connection with any other crimes.
WEATHER
Cloudiness and rain is forecast throughout the country for Monday, with
chances of local storms. Gradual improvement is expected later in the day,
moving from west to north. Athens and Thessaloniki will be overcast, with
rain in the afternoon possibly turning to storms. The temperature in Athens
will be 19C and in Thessaloniki 15C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 271.560
Pound sterling 458.205 Cyprus pd 529.530
French franc 46.451 Swiss franc 191.158
German mark 155.536 Italian lira (100) 15.865
Yen (100) 216.157 Canadian dlr. 191.139
Australian dlr. 188.857 Irish Punt 405.629
Belgian franc 7.541 Finnish mark 51.570
Dutch guilder 138.052 Danish kr. 40.866
Swedish kr. 35.712 Norwegian kr. 38.347
Austrian sch. 22.107 Spanish peseta 1.842
Port. Escudo 1.523
(L.G.)
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