Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 98-06-05
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 05/06/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Greece,Turkey agree to implement 1988 Papoulias-Yilmaz agreement
- Simitis meets with several leaders on sidelines of BSEC conference
- Joint Greek-US military exercise concluded
- G. Papandreou calls for Mediterranean 'nuclear-free zone'
- High-ranking Greece-Slovenia talks focus on Balkan security, Kosovo
- U.S. prosecution of Rashid not an issue for Athens
- Avramopoulos begins official visit to Skopje
- Court again declares Ionian strike illegal, unions in turmoil
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Greece,Turkey agree to implement 1988 Papoulias-Yilmaz agreement
NATO Secretary General Javier Solana yesterday announced that Greece and
Turkey had agreed to fully implement accords signed in 1988 concerning
rules of conduct related to military activities in the Aegean and, when pos
sible, to supplement them.
"The Secretary General of NATO, Dr. Javier Solana, is pleased to be able to
announce that in the course of his continuing talks with the Permanent
Representatives of Greece and Turkey on Confidence-Building Measures both
sides have informed him of their intention to implement fully the
agreements reached in 1988 between the then Foreign Ministers Papoulias and
Yilmaz (the Memorandum of Understanding signed on 27 May 1988 in Athens and
the Guidelines for the Prevention of Accidents and Incidents on the H igh
Seas and International Airspace, signed on 8 September 1988 in Istanbul),"
the statement said.
"The two sides have also declared their willingness to continue their talks
with the Secretary General in order to clarify where necessary and to
strengthen and complement where possible the set of confidence- building
measures which the 1988 agreements provide for and which constitute a
framework of agreed rules of behaviour regarding national military
activities in the high seas and the international airspace aimed at re
ducing tension and avoiding dangerous incidents. In this context the
Secretary General and the two countries intend to explore the opportunities
for greater mutual information and coordination offered by the emerging
NATO air command and control system (A CCS).
"In the 1988 Memorandum of Understanding both countries have recognised the
obligation to respect the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of each
other and their rights to use the high seas and international airspace of
the Aegean. Today's statement is a manifestation of the political will of
the two governments to continue to respect these principles and to carry
out in good faith the range of confidence building measures that have been
agreed as well as those that may further be agreed in the talks between
the Secretary General and the two countries, and as such it constitutes
an important interim result of these talks."
Simitis meets with several leaders on sidelines of BSEC conference
Prime Minister Costas Simitis held bilateral meetings in Yalta yesterday
with Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma, the Romanian prime minister, the
presidents of Georgia and Azerbaijan, and the prime minister of Moldova, on
the sidelines of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation pact (BSEC) summit.
The 11-nation group is comprised of Turkey, Russia, Ukraine, Greece,
Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Moldova.
Later in the evening, Mr. Simitis was due to meet with his Bulgarian
counterpart, while today he is expected to meet new Russian Prime Minister
Sergei Kiriyenko. A meeting with Turkish President Suleyman Demirel has not
been anticipated, diplomatic sources said.
Meanwhile, replying to questions by the Turkish press during his flight to
Simferopol, Crimea yesterday, Mr. Demirel said that no meeting has been
scheduled between himself and Mr. Simitis.
The charter of BSEC countries will also be endorsed during the summit
meeting today.
After the first day of sessions, Foreign Undersecretary Yiannos Kranidiotis
made the following statement:
"Greece has an interest in the area. Firstly, because it has historical
ties and traditional friendships with the peoples of the region. Secondly,
because there is a strong economic and trade interest in this region of
Europe - a region with tremendous prospects for development, especially in
the energy sector."
Joint Greek-US military exercise concluded
The US embassy in Athens yesterday announced the conclusion of a joint
Greek-US military exercise in the Volos region, central Greece.
According to the announcement, contingents from all three services of the
Greek armed forces cooperated with US Navy and US Marine detachments as
well as four US Sixth Fleet warships in this exercise, "Alexander the Great
- '98", conducted between June 1-4.
In addition, National Defence General Staff Chief Lt. Gen. Manousos
Paragioudakis and US ambassador to Athens Nicholas Burns observed the final
stage of the exercise, which included an amphibious landing on the island
of Skyros.
G. Papandreou calls for Mediterranean 'nuclear-free zone'
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou yesterday called on 26 of his
colleagues at a Euro-Mediterranean conference here to back a proposal for
declaring the Mediterranean a "nuclear-free zone". Reports stated that the
proposal receiv ed a positive response as did a proposal for the so-called
"Olympic Truce", an idea also primarily promoted by Mr. Papandreou.
Furthermore, during the meeting it was confirmed that a September
ministerial meeting on cultural issues will take place, with Mediterranean
and European non-governmental organisations, in Delphi in October. The
ministers also discussed the Middle East problem. Ministers declared their
intent to meet again on Rhodes in September.
High-ranking Greece-Slovenia talks focus on Balkan security, Kosovo
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos said yesterday that NATO is
now assuming the role of a very broad collective security organisation,
which newly emerging Balkan states could join.
"The new character of NATO, which is no longer a military organisation but
an institution of very broad influence aiming at collective security,
provides the possibility to newly founded states in the region to join in,"
he said during a joint press conference at the presidential palace with his
Slovenian counterpart Alojz Krapez and Foreign Minister Boris Frlec.
Earlier, Mr. Tsohatzopoulos held talks with the two ministers and
Slovenia's president, Milan Kucan. The high-level meetings, the first
between the two countries, were decribed as particularly substantive,
creating favourable conditions for a climate of stability and peace at the
two ends of the Balkans.
The talks also centred on the crisis in Kosovo, as both sides concurred on
the need for respect of the right to autonomy for the ethnic Albanian
majority, as well as to avoid any change of borders in the Balkans and to
promote a dialogue leading to the ultimate resolution of the problem.
Slovenian officials expressed a positive view of the creation of a Balkan
peacekeeping and crisis prevention force, as discussed in recent summits in
Sofia and on Crete.
"It is especially significant for us to discuss such issues, because the
current crisis points are here, in Bosnia Herzegovina, Kosovo, Cyprus and
the Aegean, where Turkey's aggressive behaviour and its refusal to respect
international law is leading to destabilisation," said Mr. Tsohatzopoulos.
He added that Slovenia's future participation in NATO could provide the
conditions for security and peace for all countries in the region,
stressing that Greece also fully backs its application to join the European
Union.
"Slovenia is a country quickly forging ahead with a course of convergence
with Europe," he said, adding that it was also necessary for Bulgaria and
Romania to join the next wave of NATO enlargement.
In addition, initial agreement was forged to sign a bilateral defence
cooperation pact that will include the holding of joint exercises, during
Mr. Krapez's planned visit to Athens in the next few months.
Mr. Tsohatzopoulos later visited a military base and the Hellenic Navy
frigate "Macedonia", which is participating in a NATO naval force in the
Adriatic, as well as the Turkish frigate "Kara-Deniz", also part of the
same force. The NATO commander heading the force later hosted a reception
in the Greek minister's honour aboard the vessel.
U.S. prosecution of Rashid not an issue for Athens
The Greek government said yesterday that it was "not annoyed" about the
arrest by U.S. authorities of Mohammad Rashid, a former PLO officer
convicted in Greece of planting a bomb in 1982 on a U.S. airliner.
"The authorities of each country do what they must and we feel we have
handled the issue responsibly here," Mr. Reppas said in reply to press
questions.
Justice Department officials in Washington said on Wednesday that the U.S.
had brought Rashid to Washington to stand trial for the bombing of a Pan
American airliner over Hawaii in which a Japanese teenager was killed.
Rashid was tried on the same charges and sentenced to 18 years imprisonment
by a Greek court in 1992 for premeditated murder.
In 1993 his sentence was reduced to 15 years, and a parole court shortly
ruled that he could be freed after serving 8.5 years, but must be expelled
immediately. His time in detention before his sentencing was calculated as
part of his sentence. Rashid's release and deportation from Greece in 1996
drew the displeasure of the U.S., with then State Department spokesman
Nicholas Burns (and present Ambassador to Athens) saying that Rashid "is a
terrorist who deserves to be behind bars" and that it was "inexplicable to
us why he would have been allowed to leave Greece before serving his
just sentence...This is an incomprehensible move."
In Washington on Wednesday, Rashid pleaded not guilty at an initial court
appearance to charges that carry a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Rashid protested that he had already been tried on the charges he now faced
in the United States.
Justice Department officials declined to give details of how or where
Rashid, referred to by one official as "a fugitive terrorist," was
captured. They said he had been flown to Washington on Wednesday morning.
Avramopoulos begins official visit to Skopje
Athens Mayor Dimitris Avramopoulos yesterday began a two-day officialvisit
to Skopje, the capital of Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), at
the invitation of the city's mayor Risto Penov.
Mr. Avramopoulos, who is accompanied by a group of Greek business people,
will meet with the president of the neighbouring country Kiro Gligorov,
Prime Minister Branko Crvenkovski as well as opposition party leaders.
Before his departure to Skopje, Mr. Avramopoulos stressed that the mission
is within the framework of efforts for the better acquaintance and
cooperation of the region's peoples.
He also noted that he briefed both Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos and
main opposition New Democracy leader Costas Karamanlis on his scheduled
visit.
Furthermore, he clarified that he would not discuss political or national
issues, but rather focus on local self-government issues and possibilities
for cooperation between local governments of the region.
Court again declares Ionian strike illegal, unions in turmoil
The General Confederation of Greek Workers (GSEE) yesterday backed the
continuation at least until Wede nsday of a strike by Ionian Bank staff,
despite a court ruling declaring the strike illegal.
The ruling by the Athens court of first instance applies to a walkout from
June 1 to June 6, called by the Federation of Bank Employees' Unions (OTOE)
to protest against Ionian Bank's privatisation. GSEE's board decided to
back the strike by a nine to six majority, despite initial indications that
it might refraim from taking a position on the issue.
According to union sources, the majority of PASOK-aligned trade unionists
in GSEE argued that the umbrella group could not debate calling a fresh
strike if no request was received from OTOE. Nevertheless, they were
outvoted by an alliance of all opposi tion-party affilitated members.
News of the court ruling coincided with a fraught meeting of OTOE leaders
over the brawl with the government, which has refused to reconsider
privatising the bank.
Workers at Ionian have staged a rolling strike since May 11 in protest at
the decision to sell a majority stake in the bank rather than merge it with
state-owned Commercial Bank of Greece, its parent. Both banks are
listed.
Under the latest court ruling, workers were ordered to halt the strike and
barred from staging any further stoppages carrying the same demands. The
court also slapped a one-million drachma fine on union leaders for each day
the strike is prolonged.
Liable to the fine are the president of Ionian Bank's staff association,
Yiannis Markakis, and its general secretary, Stavros Nikolaou.
Earlier yesterday OTOE voted to endorse a proposal by its president,
Dimitris Kouselas, to continue its backing for the strike until Saturday
while refraining from asking GSEE to call a new strike.
Ionian's union will now have to decide whether to continue a strike ruled
illegal, or bow to the court's decision, weakening opposition to the
privatisation attempt.
Rejected was a proposal by Ionian's union president, Yiannis Markakis, to
call a three-day strike next week. The proposal was back-ed by trade
unionists aligned to the Communist Party of Greece and Coalition of the
Left.
As a result, Ionian union representatives stormed out of OTOE's meeting and
staged an unofficial occupation of the union group's offices in protest an
earlier refusal to ask GSEE to call a strike.
Last month, unions shrugged off a court ruling that declared an earlier
stoppage illegal and made the two Ionian union leaders liable to fines of
400,000 drachmas for each day that stoppage continued.
On Tuesday, National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos Papantoniou told
unions that redundancies could be avoided after privatisation by incorporating
the bank's existing labour regulations into any sale contract; but the sale
itself would go ahead.
According to the government, no change to the law will be required to
insert the regulations, which allows for massive severance pay, into the
contract.
Ionian's workers have stayed off the job but union lawyers are studying the
government's proposal, which came in the wake of an earlier offer of a two-
year freeze on lay-offs.
The government hopes to set a deadline for bids for the sale of Ionian Bank
in the middle of July with a call for expressions of interest due to be
published late in June, sources said yesterday.
The proposal to sell Ionian first has to be endorsed at a meeting of
Commercial Bank of Greece's shareholders on June 19.
The sources were speaking after a meeting of National Economy Minister
Yiannos Papantoniou with deputy ministers, Ionian's management and a PASOK
trade union official on a timescale for the bank's sale.
Likely to be used is a bidding process through the Athens Stock Exchange.
WEATHER
Fair weather will prevail throughout Greece today with the possibility of
scattered showers in eastern Macedonia and Thrace. Winds will be variable,
light to strong. Temperatures in Athens will range between 19-31C, while in
Thessaloniki from 17-31C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Thursday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 298.394
British pound 488.342 Japanese yen(100) 215.700
French franc 50.304 German mark 168.645
Italian lira (100) 17.126 Irish Punt 425.667
Belgian franc 8.177 Finnish mark 55.502
Dutch guilder 149.663 Danish kr. 44.289
Austrian sch. 23.971 Spanish peseta 1.986
Swedish kr. 38.480 Norwegian kr. 40.051
Swiss franc 202.611 Port. Escudo 1.646
Aus. dollar 182.379 Can. dollar 204.927
Cyprus pound 575.043
(L.G.)
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