Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-03-05
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 05/03/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- No intervention in Kosovo, Athens says
- Greek position on Skopje unchanged
- Scuffles greet Simitis on university visit
- Kastoria police confused over what to do with mules
- Defence Minister to visit Georgia
- Seamen protest unemployment in sector
- Greek aid for Bosnia
- Mild correction on stock exchange
- Private casinos report turnover of 343 billion
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
No intervention in Kosovo, Athens says
The province of Kosovo belongs to Yugoslavia and any intervention motivated
by the domestic affairs of another country should not be conceivable,
government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said today.
The spokesman made the statement when asked by reporters about the
possibility of US military intervention in the strife-torn province of
Kosovo.
Greek position on Skopje unchanged
The government said today that its position on the name of the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) remained the same.
"Greece will not discuss a solution which in any way includes the word
'Macedonia' in the name of the neighbouring country," government spokesman
Dimitris Reppas said.
Stressing that Athens wanted the interim agreement signed by the two
countries to be adhered to, he called on Skopje to contribute to efforts to
find a mutually acceptable solution.
To date, Reppas added, Skopje had not done this, being firmly entrenched in
their position.
Scuffles greet Simitis on university visit
Scuffles broke out between groups of students and the police today at the
Panteio University in Athens shortly before the inauguration of a new
library where Prime Minister Costas Simitis was scheduled to speak.
Simitis later officially inaugurated the new library as groups of students
shouted and jeered.
Addressing the event, the prime minister underlined the special importance
which both he and the government attached to libraries.
"The library is the nucleus of research and educational activity at a
university," Simitis said, adding that funds totalling 25 billion drachmas
had been allocated for the upgrading of libraries in a special programme
under the Community Support Framework II.
Panteio Dean Aimilios Metaxopoulos stressed that Simitis was a member of
the university community, having lectured there for a number of years. He
noted that the premier had donated 4,000 books to the Panteio from his
father's collection.
Today, the 8,000-square-metre library has 70,000 titles, while a further 40,
000 will soon be added. It also offers the very latest services, including
Internet access.
The library employs a full-time staff of 24 and remains open 24 hours a
day.
Kastoria police confused over what to do with mules
Fourteen trained mules that ran into a police ambush yesterday while
transporting two tonnes of hashish over the Albanian border are posing a
problem for Kastoria police, who have impounded the mules as "vehicles"
used in a crime.
According to the law, the mules will be auctioned off after due legal
process, but until then there is the problem of their care, since the Greek
army no longer has either a cavalry or stables, while mules are now rare on
Greek farms, where luxury jeeps are now more common.
One suggestion, to let them find their own way home again, has been
rejected as irregular from the legal viewpoint and because of the
likelihood they would soon be back bearing more drugs.
Until a decision is made, the mules are being kept under guard on a
football field in the village of Dipotamia.
Defence Minister to visit Georgia
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos leaves tonight for Georgia to
officially hand over the search and rescue vessel "Lindos" to the Georgian
navy.
The vessel is a gift from Greece within the framework of a bilateral
military accord signed last year in Tbilisi.
The ceremony will take place in the port of Poti tomorrow, where the Lindos
is arrive accompanied by the tank landing craft "Samos" with a cargo of
humanitarian aid.
Seamen protest unemployment in sector
About 500 seamen held a demonstration in Piraeus today to protest
widespread unemployment among merchant navy engineers.
Trade union leaders who addressed the protest rally charged that the
government, instead of solving the problems was making them worse,
resulting in an increase in unemployment.
After the rally, the protesters marched through Piraeus to the Merchant
Marine Ministry building, where a committee asked to meet with Minister
Stavros Soumakis who was however elsewhere.
The protesters said they would wait outside the building until Soumakis
returns.
Greek aid for Bosnia
A Greek humanitarian aid mission left today for Bosina-Herzegovina to help
war widows with children on the occasion of International Women's Day on
March 8.
The Greek Solidarity Caravan will be handing over financial assistance from
5,500 Greek donors who have each "adopted" an orphan, and will meet with
the president of the Republika Srpska, the Serb entity within Bosnia-
Herzegovina, and the minister for health and war victims.
Mild correction on stock exchange
Greek equities came under mild profit-taking pressure at today's session on
the Athens Stock Exchange, ending a two-day rally.
Traders said news of a small rise in interbank rates and outflows totalling
60 million US dollars at the drachma's fixing discouraged sentiment and led
investors to early liquidation of recent gains.
The general index closed 0.23 percent down at 1,463.16 points. Sector
indices were mixed. Banks fell 0.75 percent, Insurance was 0.73 percent
down, Leasing rose 0.19 percent, Investment increased 0.23 percent,
Construction ended 0.37 percent up, Industrials fell 0.57 percent,
Miscellaneous was 0.10 percent higher and Holding fell 0.79 percent.
The parallel market index for small cap companies eased 0.51 percent, while
the FTSE/ASE index ended at 817.10 points, down 0.29 percent.
Trading was heavy with turnover at 20.4 billion drachmas. Hellenic
Telecommunications Organisation's shares rose another 145 drachmas to end
at 6,085 in heavy volume of 1,074,120 issues.
Broadly, decliners led advancers by 133 to 83 with another 21 issues
unchanged.
European Credit, Tria Alpha and Ridenco scored the biggest percentage gains
at the daily 8.0 percent upper volatility limit, while Viosol, Agrinio
Metalplastic, Desmos and Ekter suffered the heaviest losses.
National Bank of Greece ended at 20,990 drachmas, Ergobank at 15,005, Alpha
Credit Bank at 15,980, Delta Dairy at 2,930, Titan Cement at 14,140 and
Intracom at 15,000.
Private casinos report turnover of 343 billion
Greece's private casinos' 1997 turnover totalled 343 billion drachmas,
while state-owned casinos revenue totalled 50 billion in the last year, a
development ministry official said.
He said that an average of 2,500 people were visiting the country's six
private casinos on a daily basis, while another 850 were visiting the
state's three casinos in Mount Parnes, Corfu and Rhodes.
WEATHER
Fine weather is forecast in most parts of Greece today with temperatures
remaining high for this time of year. Possibility of light rain in the
evening in the northern Ionian Sea, Epirus and Macedonia. Winds light to
moderate. Mostly fair weather in Athens with temperartures between 8-21C.
Scattered clouds in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 4-18C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Wednesday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 284.436
Pound sterling 469.216 Cyprus pd 535.680
French franc 46.747 Swiss franc 192.671
German mark 156.746 Italian lira (100) 15.924
Yen (100) 225.620 Canadian dlr. 200.086
Australian dlr. 191.724 Irish Punt 389.439
Belgian franc 7.597 Finnish mark 51.659
Dutch guilder 139.073 Danish kr. 41.128
Swedish kr. 35.658 Norwegian kr. 37.742
Austrian sch. 22.281 Spanish peseta 1.849
Port. Escudo 1.532
(M.P.)
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