Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-03-06
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 06/03/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- February inflation falls to 4.3 pct
- Gov't condemns Kosovo violence
- No back-tracking on education reforms
- Illegal immigrants contribute to crime - Romeos
- PM wants stepped-up decentralisation to local gov't
- Crime on agenda of Balkan tripartite meeting
- Three arrested in radar protests
- New Jewish museum of Greece to open next week
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
February inflation falls to 4.3 pct
Year-on-year inflation fell to 4.3 percent in February, a fall of 0.1
percent from January's figure, the National Statistics Service (ESYE) said
today.
ESYE secretary-general Nikos Karavitis predicted that the downward trend
would continue in the coming months and that March year-on-year inflation
would fall below 4.3 percent.
February's figure was down 0.5 percent compared to a reduction of 0.4
percent in the same month last year.
Average inflation in the February 1997-1998 was 5.2 percent compared to 7.9
percent in the February 1996-1997 period.
The fall in inflation was attributed to reduced prices in clothing and
footwear due to the winter sales and to a fall in petrol prices.
Gov't condemns Kosovo violence
The Greek government condemns violence in Kosovo from wherever it
originates and is opposed to the secession of the region as well as to any
change of borders in the region, government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said
today.
He added that Athens was calling on the two sides in the Kosovo problem to
engage in dialogue so that a mutually acceptable solution might be
found.
Greece, the spokesman added, is at the disposal of both sides in terms of
extending its good offices.
No back-tracking on education reforms
There will be no back-tracking on reforms under way to the Greek education
system and teachers must contribute to making them a success, government
spokesman Dimitris Reppas said today.
Reppas was responding to questions at a news briefing shortly after
unemployed and substitute teachers held a protest march in the city
center.
In Kavala, teachers held a three-hour work stoppage at junior and senior
high schools to allow substitute teachers to participate in the Athens
march. Teachers' union OLME called a four-hour work stoppage in Athens to
allow teachers to attend the rally.
The teachers are demanding that they be exempted from a competition to
grade and appoint them to public service positions, part of new measures
introduced by Education Minister Gerasimos Arsenis designed to restructure
and streamline the education system. The measures include the abolition of
a waiting list for teachers to public school appointments.
"The educational reforms are a given and all are obliged to contribute to
their success," Reppas told reporters.
High school teachers early last year held an eight-week walk-out to protest
the reforms.
Illegal immigrants contribute to crime - Romeos
Public Order Minister George Romeos said today that the thousands of
illegal immigrants entering the country were contributing considerably to
the increase in Greece's crime rate.
Speaking at a conference on foreigners in Europe at the Orthodox Academy of
Crete in Chania, Romeos referred to the measures being taken by the Greek
government concerning illegal immigrants, but stressed that in order to
make the problem less acute, initiatives would have to be taken at a
European level.
Romeos attributed the large increase in the influx of illegal immigrants to
the "games" of the major powers, citing as an example the sanctions imposed
on Iraq and the Kurdish problem.
He forecast that the problem would in the future take on explosive
dimensions.
The UN High Commission's representative in Greece, Janvier de Riednmateten,
who is attending the conference, described as positive the measures being
taken by the government to faciliate the reception of immigrants.
According to public order ministry figures released at the end of February,
murders rose by 37 per cent to 251 in 1997, compared to the previous year,
while the percentage of unsolved crimes rose by 45 per cent over the same
period.
PM wants stepped-up decentralisation to local gov't
Prime Minister Costas Simitis at a Cabinet meeting today called for the
speeding up of procedures aimed at the decentralisation of functions and
duties to local and prefectural authorities.
The premier said it was necessary for decentralisation to proceed at a
faster pace in order for the government to complete its administrative
reforms, contained in several institutional bills such as the "Capodistrias"
bill which reorganises the structure of local government.
According to informed sources, Simitis also urged the speeding up of
infrastructure works being carried out in the provinces.
Crime on agenda of Balkan tripartite meeting
Drugs and arms smuggling and organised crime will be among the key issues
to be discussed over the weekend by the public order ministers of Greece,
Romania and Bulgaria in Thessaloniki, the Public Order Ministry said
today.
The tripartite talks will also focus on terrorism, money laundering and
illegal migration, a ministry source told the ANA.
Greece's public order minister George Romaios and counterparts Gavril Dejeu
of Romania and Bogomil Bonev of Bulgaria, heading delegations from their
respective countries, plan to "lay the foundations for intensified
cooperation and the development of coordinated and efficient measures in
combatting organised crime, terrorism, drug and weapons trafficking, money
laundering and illegal migration", the source said.
The talks will open at the Mediterranean Palace Hotel in Thessaloniki on
Saturday morning, and will be followed by a press conference.
The Bulgarian and Romanian ministers will be taken on a tour of Greek
archaeological sites later in the day and on Sunday they will be flown by
helicopter to the all-male monastic community of Mt. Athos.
Three arrested in radar protests
Three people were arrested today when residents of areas near Thessaloniki
airport clashed with riot police who had blocked a road leading to a site
designated for radar installations.
The residents of Perea and adjoining areas have for the past four days been
protesting the installation of the landing radar by the Civil Aviation
Authority, believing it will pose a serious health hazard.
Scuffles broke out when the protesting residents tried to break through the
police cordon set up early this morning.
Representatives of the protesters in a statement yesterday rejected all
forms of violence but warned that the residents' reactions "cannot be
controlled".
After three people were arrested this morning, the protesters moved a short
distance away from the police cordon and continued to demonstrate
peacefully.
Local residents have sought the intervention of the public works ministry
to halt construction at least until their appeal to the Council of State is
heard on May 8.
New Jewish museum of Greece to open next week
The Jewish Museum of Greece, whose collections chronicle the relatively
unknown and insufficiently documented 2,300-year history of the Greek Jews,
opens to the public next week in its newly-acquired own premises.
Housed in a neoclassical building on 39 Nikis street in Plaka, the 800
sq.m. museum will be inaugurated Tuesday night in a formal ceremony
attended by Culture Minister Envagelos, Education Minister Gerassimos
Arsenis and Athens Mayor Dimitris Avramopoulos.
The museum's 7,000 artefacts, documents and photographs are divided into
nine thematic entities exhibited on the nine levels of the building
surrounding an octagonal atrium with a clear glass dome at the top letting
ample natural light into the building's interior.
"Most of the exhibits in the Museum's collection have been acquired on the
basis of their authenticity and direct association with some of the 28
Jewish communities that thrived in various parts of Greece prior to World
War II," a museum spokesman told the ANA.
"Although the majority of the exhibits -- unlike their original owners --
managed to survive the war, this Museum is not intended to serve as a
'monument' to the almost total success of the nazi regime in eliminating
the Jewish element from the face of the earth, but to provide the
appropriate environment for studying the rich and multi-cultural Jewish
history and the more than 2,300 year old presence of the Jewish people
throughout Greece," the spokesman said.
The museum documents the history of the early Greek-speaking Jews, or
"Romaniote", from the first Jewish immigration in Phoenician times -- when
Jewish communities flourished in much of the Mediterranean -- to the
arrival of the Sephardim, or Spanish Jews, after their expulsion from Spain
by the Holy Inquisition in 1492, to the Holocaust and the present.
"The exhibition chronicles the historical, religious and social history of
the Greek Jewish community," the spokesman said, adding that a gallery of
related exhibits had been set up in memory of the 70,000 Greek Jews who
perished in the Holocaust and in honor of "the numerous (Christian) Greeks
who helped many others to survive".
He said the first written evidence of the establishment of Jews in Greece
comes from an inscription discovered in Oropos, Attica, dating to circa 300-
250 B.C., which refers to a Jew from Beotia named Moschos Moschionos.
It is believed that the first Jews arriving in Greece came as slaves sold
by the various conquerors of Judaea to neighbouring nations, the spokesman
said.
The Jewish Museum of Greece, founded in 1997, ranks third among the top
Jewish Museums in Europe, he added.
WEATHER
Strong northerly winds and a drop in temperatures will be the main
characteristics of today's weather in Greece. Local clouds in central and
northern Greece and the islands of the northern and eastern Aegean with the
possibility of rain in the northeast. Mostly fair weather in the rest of
the country. Winds northerly, moderate to strong. Scattered clouds in
Athens with temperatures between 10-17C. Similar weather in Thessaloniki
with temperatures from 7-13C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Thursday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 284.109
Pound sterling 469.355 Cyprus pd 536.672
French franc 46.805 Swiss franc 192.994
German mark 156.924 Italian lira (100) 15.943
Yen (100) 223.567 Canadian dlr. 199.372
Australian dlr. 190.925 Irish Punt 389.658
Belgian franc 7.606 Finnish mark 51.711
Dutch guilder 139.232 Danish kr. 41.182
Swedish kr. 35.702 Norwegian kr. 37.783
Austrian sch. 22.306 Spanish peseta 1.852
Port. Escudo 1.535
(M.P.)
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