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Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 97-11-24

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, 24/11/1997 (ANA)


MAIN HEADLINES

  • President unveils Jewish Martyrs monument in Thessaloniki
  • Pangalos, Cordovez discuss Cyprus
  • Greek, Jewish diaspora committee to be set up
  • Tsohatzopoulos, Hauer examine NATO's new structure
  • Burns: US supports Greece's prominent role in the Balkans
  • Italian Red Brigades fugitive arrested in Greece
  • New European Left Forum focuses on Euromediterranean cooperation
  • Tsohatzopoulos says Aegean tension deliberate
  • Defence Minister begins five-day visit to China
  • Greek cinema to receive 'generous support'
  • Greek First Division soccer results
  • Weather
  • Foreign exchange

NEWS IN DETAIL

President unveils Jewish Martyrs monument in Thessaloniki

President of the Republic Kostis Stephanopoulos yesterday unvei-led 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 comes 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 Andreas Sefi cha, president of the Central Jewish Council of Greece Nissim Mais, Thessaloniki Jew survivors of the Holocaust 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.

In a message to the ceremony, President Clinton said the Thessaloniki monument would stand as a reminder of the "past evil" but also as an inspiration for the "future good".

He said the young people gazing at it would learn the sad lessons of history and those who visited it would reaffirm the importance of human life.

Israeli Health Minister Yehoshua Matsa briefly outlined the journey of the sons of Israel from the land of their fathers to Thessaloniki, often called the "Mother of Israel" and the "Jerusalem of the Balkans" by the tens of thousands of Jews who fled th ere from the Holy Inquisition in Spain.

He said the story of the 50,000 Thessaloniki Jews who perished in the Holocaust was "not only one of destruction but also a story of courage and rebirth, that of the brave Greeks who risked their lives to hide and offer refuge to their Jewish compatriots and the struggle of those who survived the Nazi death camps to put their lives back together".

Pangalos, Cordovez discuss Cyprus

Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos met on Saturday with UN Secretary General's special advisor on Cyprus Diego Cordovez and discussed recent developments in the protracted Cyprus problem.

Diplomatic sources said that Mr. Cordovez, who last week held talks in Nicosia, also discussed with Mr. Pangalos possibilities of achieving progress in specific issues on the basis of a step-by-step approach. Mr. Cordovez is due in Ankara today.

Greek, Jewish diaspora committee to be set up

Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou yesterday announced that a mixed committee of representatives of the overseas Greeks' organisations and the Jewish communities abroad would be set up to promote issues of mutual interest.

Speaking after the unveiling of a Holocaust Monument in the northern Greek capital dedicated to the 50,000 Thessaloniki Jews who perished in Nazi concentration camps, Mr. Papandreou said that overseas Greeks' representatives and Jewish communities were advancing the establishment of the joint committee.

Tsohatzopoulos, Hauer examine NATO's new structure

Greece sees no threat to its national security or sovereign rights under a new structure and mode of operation being planned for the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos said on Saturday.

"NATO's new structure and its prospects for operation have no bearing on the country's national security and sovereign rights. This is clear and warrants no confusion," Mr. Tsohatzopoulos told reporters after a meeting in Athens with Germany's Deputy Fo reign Minister Werner Hauer, who described the talks on defence and security as frank.

The planned abolition of NATO's areas of operational control would not impinge on Greek sovereign rights as the Alliance, which had acquired a multinational status spanning Europe and the Atlantic, was no longer responsible for a specific area, Mr. Tsohatzopoulos said. Its mission was to handle trouble spots that were a source of international destabilisation.

Greece's government on Friday set its policy on the plans for change in NATO, which are due for debate at a meeting of the Alliance defence ministers on December 1-3 in Brussels.

The government has made it clear that it maintains the right of veto on the planning, design and enactment of military exercises.

It backs the development of NATO into a collective security organisation, and agrees in principle with the establishment of headquarters for the organisation's southeast European flank in Italy with secondary headquarters in Greece, Italy, Spain and Turkey.

Mr. Tsohatzopoulos and Mr. Hauer discussed relations between Greece and Turkey, the Cyprus issue, bilateral relations and developments in Europe. No further details were given.

Mr. Hauer represented Germany at a Thessaloniki ceremony yesterday in which a monument to Jewish victims of the Nazi occupation of Thessaloniki was unveiled.

Burns: US supports Greece's prominent role in the Balkans

New US ambassador to Athens, Nicholas Burns, who is expected in the Greek capital on November 30, has praised Greece's prominent role in the Balkans, and stressed his country's support for the reforms promoted by the Simitis g overnment.

" We think that the reorientation of Greek foreign policy to the north, towards Albania, FYROM, Bulgaria and Romania is positive. Greece can be a stabilising force in the Balkans that need this. We very much approve of the Simitis government reforms and fully support the efforts towards economic modernisation," he told the Antenna Greek television channel in an interview aired yesterday.

Mr. Burns also reiterated the readiness of the US to play a prominent role in promoting solutions to Greek-Turkish differences and the Cyprus problem.

Athens, Ankara, and the two communities on the island "may know that the US is an active partner on whom they can rely," he stressed, adding that his aim was to work "on a basis of cooperation and respect with the Greek government on all issues".

Regarding US-Greek bilateral relations, Mr. Burns said his aims included increasing trade above the current 1.5 billion dollar a year level, and reiterated the importance his government attributed to cooperation with Greece in fighting terrorism.

Italian Red Brigades fugitive arrested in Greece

The Greek anti-terrorism squad arrested Italian Enrico Bianco, 45, a suspected Red Brigades terrorist, police said yesterday.

Bianco was arrested on a yacht docked at Aktion, Western Greece. Anti- terrorist police said he was with four other people at the time, including one woman, who were also taken into custody.

Police were investigating whether they had ties with Bianco's terrorist activities in Italy or elsewhere in Europe. Police are also investigating whether Bianco had been involved in terrorist activities in Greece or had terrorist connections here.

Police said Bianco had travelled frequently in and out of Greece, mostly to France, and they were investigating whether he was accompanied by others on those trips.

They were also investigating fingerprints taken from the yacht and from Bianco's flat in the Athens residential district of Pangrati.

The anti-terrorist squad were acting on a tip-off that the fugitive was in Greece and usually stayed on yachts. They located Bianco's flat and, after discrete surveillance of the people entering and exiting the building, they found him on the yacht at Aktio.

New European Left Forum focuses on Euromediterranean cooperation

The issue of Euromediterranean cooperation was the focus of a session of the New European Left Forum, held in Zappeion Hall in Athens this morning, at the initiative of the Coalition of the Left, and with the participation of 25 parties from various coun tries.

In their addresses, Coalition leader Nikos Constantopoulos and Greek EU Energy Commissioner Christos Papoutsis referred to the conditions for the formulation of a comprehensive plan for development and security in the Mediterranean, which will include settlements of the Cyprus and Middle East issues.

Mr. Constantopoulos said the basic elements comprising such an endeavour were given: Peaceful conflict resolution, respect for the right of every nation to adopt its own development model, protection of the environment, respect for international law, equality between the sexes, bridging inequalities, democracy, and protection of human rights.

The Coalition leader announced the holding of a two-day conference on the Cyprus issue on December 10 and 11, with the participation of Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot parties "believing in the rapprochement between the two communities".

Mr. Papoutsis said in his address that issues of Euromediterranean cooperation were currently "at a crucial turn".

"The relationship between Europe and the Mediterranean is of strategic importance, particularly in view of European Union enlargement," he stressed, adding, however, that factors such as the rise of internal tension in the countries of northern Africa and southeast Europe, religious fanaticism and economic problems hindered the progress of this relationship.

He expressed the view that the EU must boost its bilateral transactions with individual Mediterranean countries, and assist in the "internationalisation" of the very small and medium size enterprises which are a distinguishing feature of their economies.

Referring to other concerns regarding the European Union, representatives of left-wing and socialist parties taking part in the forum stressed that its main pursuits should be the safeguarding of its social phase and the developmental strategy and policy on employment issues. Without these two conditions, the necessary monetary unification would not achieve its aims, they said, and this was the point where the forces of the Left were called upon to play a catalytic role.

The Forum called for the power to be given to the EU to levy the minimum of common environmental taxes -dubbed "green" taxes-, by decisions of increased majority, in order to enable the Union to apply the recommendations of the Rio Earth Summit regarding stabilisation of carbon dioxide emissions.

Women taking part in the Forum called for a boosting of women's participation in decisions regarding the strengthening of relations between states.

Apart from Greece, the countries represented at the conference were Britain, France, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Austria, Esthonia, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Norway, Holland, Sweden, Finland, Egypt, Cyprus, Albania, Algeria, Austria, Turkey, Bulgaria, Israel, USA and Russia.

Tsohatzopoulos says Aegean tension deliberate

Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos has accused Turkey of deliberately maintaining tension in the Aegean in pursuit of a change in the status quo.

"The tension in the Aegean exists because it is Turkey's political option to deliberately challenge stability, dispute our territorial rights, and seek a change in the status quo in the Aegean. It is a purely political issue and primarily concern Turkey ," he said in an interview with the newspaper Ethnos yesterday.

He also expressed the view that Turkey's proposals for dialogue on all issues aimed to create false impressions, and that its aggressive policy was confirmed by the armaments programme it is implementing.

"Vis-a-vis these attempts, Greece is formulating a defence strategy guaranteeing its defence sufficiency and the deterrent capability of its armed forces, including that of immediate response in the case of practical challenge to our rights or any aggre ssive act on the part of Turkey," he added.

He reiterated that Greece will not stand idle in case Turkey attempted to use violence against Cyprus, and expressed the view that, despite threats to the contrary, Turkey would not undertake any offensive action against Russian vessels transporting the ordered S-300 surface-to-air missiles to Cyprus.

He attributed Turkey's milder stance currently to the fact that focus will now be shifted to confidence building measures in the Aegean.

Defence Minister begins five-day visit to China

Defence minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos left for a five-day official visit to China yesterday, at the invitation of his counterpart Chi Haotian. Tomorrow, Mr. Tsohatzopoulos will visit the Great Wall, the headquarters of the Third Army Division and the insta llations of the China North Industry Corporation, a manufacturer of military equipment.

On Wednesday, the Greek defence minister is scheduled to meet Chinese Prime Miniter Li Peng, while on Thursday he will be hosted to dinner by the Chairman of the Science and Technology Council of China's defence industry, Lt.Gen Kao Gan Chuan.

Greek cinema to receive 'generous support'

Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos yesterday announced that Greek cinema production would receive generous support, and that the Thessaloniki Film Festival would be upgraded, and would feature a foreign films competitive section as of next year.

Speaking at a press conference in the northern port city on the occasion of the ongoing festival, he also specified that the event would also feature the entire Greek cinema production. Referring to the envisaged increased support measures for Greek ci nema, he said that theatres screening Greek films would receive tax rebates ranging from 30 to 50 per cent.

Greek First Division soccer results

AEK-Panahaiki 5-1 Panathinaikos-Proodeftiki 5-0 Ionikos-Olympiakos O-1 Heraklis-Kavala 3-2 OFI-Apollon 2-1 Xanthi-Panionios 2-0 Pyrgos-PAOK 1-2 Athinaikos-Veria 1-0 Kalamata-Ethnikos 0-1 Standings-points: AEK 28, Panathinaikos, Olympiakos 27 Ionikos 24 Heraklis 20, PAOK 19, Apollon, Xanthi 17, OFI 14, Panahaiki, Panionios 13

WEATHER

Cloudiness and rain is forecast throughout the country today with possible local storms. Gradual improvement is expected in the evening, moving from west to north. Athens and Thessaloniki will be overcast and rainy with possible storms. 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

(C.E.)


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