Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-12-04
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 04/12/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Gov't orders striking customs employees back to work
- Customs strike declared illegal again
- Stranded motorists at mercy of gangs
- November inflation falls to 4.2%
- Clinton: personal involvement in Cyprus
- Retired police chief shot down
- Two die, 15 injured in bus crash
- Defence minister to visit India
- Trains back on track
- Drama police at a loss over theft of 300 kilo safe
- Greek equities rally on rate cut hopes
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Gov't orders striking customs employees back to work
The government on Friday decided to make use of legislation to force
customs employees back to work after a week-long strike caused widespread
fuel shortages and major problems for Greece's import-export trade. The
decision was announced by National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos
Papantoniou who said that the government had exhausted all margin for
further dialogue. Customs officers began striking on Monday to protest
plans to merge their financially robust pension fund with other, weaker
funds. Today's provisions mean that striking civil servants are ordered
back to work and face dismissal if they refuse. The decision takes effect
immediately.
Customs strike declared illegal again
An Athens court earlier today declared the customs employees' 24-hour
rolling strikes illegal and abusive, stressing inter alia that it harmed
the national economy and created urgent needs among the citizens. An Athens
court earlier this week declared the five-day strike initially declared by
the union of customs employees as illegal, and so customs workers ditched
the week-long strike and reverted to one-day rolling strikes to circumvent
the court decision.
Stranded motorists at mercy of gangs
Hundreds of Greek truck drivers stranded in kilometres-long queues on the
Bulgarian side of the border with Greece due to the ongoing strike by Greek
customs employees have complained that armed gangs were attacking them and
looting their trucks at night. About 400 Greek and foreign trucks have been
stranded in Bulgaria in the vicinity of the Promachonas border post waiting
to cross into Greece since Monday, when the customs employees launched
their strike, now in its fifth day, officials from the Greek embassy in
Sofia said.
November inflation falls to 4.2%
Year-on year inflation fell to 4.2 per cent in November from 4.7 per cent
the previous month, the National Statistics Service (ESY) announced on
Friday. ESY forecast that consumer price inflation would fall to 4.0
percent at the end of December. It said that the consumer price index (CPI)
slipped 0.1 percent in November against a 0.4 percent rise in the same
month of last year. Contributing to November's decline were a reduction in
tax on heating oil, which brought the CPI down 0.15 percentage points, and
a tax cut on cars, which brought a 0.13 point drop.
Clinton: personal involvement in Cyprus
US President Bill Clinton informed Greek-American leaders Friday ofhis
intent to become personally involved in ongoing efforts to solve the 25-
year-old Cyprus problem and reduce tension in the Aegean, an ANA dispatch
from Washington said. The report, quoting Greek-American leaders who
attended the meeting, said that Clinton appeared to be "very well informed"
on the situation in all areas of Greek-turkish relations, and the Greek-
American leaders believed that the US President's interest was "genuine".
Retired police chief shot down
The former head of the Thessaloniki security police was killed during an
armed robbery in the northern Greek city on Friday morning. Dimitris
Karagounis, 58, retired from the police force with the rank of major
general in 1990 and subsequently set up a private security firm. He was
shot when he intervened as two people tried to rob two of his firm's guards
as they were waiting for him outside his home. The guards had in their
possession some four million drachmas. Karagounis died en route to the
Hippocration Hospital. Police have launched a manhunt for the two
men.
Two die, 15 injured in bus crash
Two inter-city coaches and a car were involved in a crash on the coast road
between Itea and Nafpaktos near Panormos in central Greece on Friday in
which at least two people are believed to have died and over 15 injured.
According to eye-witnesses, the accident was caused when the driver of the
car entered the lane of oncoming traffic and collided with one of the
coaches. It was unclear how the second coach became involved in the crash,
which took place in torrential rain.
Defence minister to visit India
Greece and India are expected to sign a protocol of cooperation in the
defence sector during National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos's visit
to New Delhi, beginning on Saturday. Tsohatzopoulos's four-day visit is on
the invitaiton of his Indian counterpart, George Fernandes. He is expected
to meet with Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee as well as Congress
Party leader Sonia Gandhi. Also on Tsohatzopoulos's agenda is a talk to
the Institute of Defence Studies on the European security structure
ahead of the 21st century. The minister flies from India to Brussels
on December 9 to participate in a European Socialist Party meeting.
Trains back on track
Train services throughout the country were running normally after the
Panhellenic Federation of Railway Employees (POS) called off a scheduled 24-
hour strike, the Greek Railways Organisation (OSE) said on Friday. POS held
work stoppages on Monday and Tuesday and 24-hour rolling strikes on
Wednesday and Thursday to protest reforms planned by the government in the
transport sector.
Drama police at a loss over theft of 300 kilo safe
Thieves in Drama, clearly inspired by the outstanding performance of the
Greek men's national weightlifting team at the world championships in
Finland last month, "snatched" a 300-kg. safe they were unable to crack,
dragged it down three flights of stairs and loaded it onto a van before
escaping. The thieves struck early Wednesday morning at the offices of the
Drama inter-city coach company on the third floor of a building in the
centre of the northern Greek town. Unable to open the safe, which contained
2.5 million drachmas, the thieves apparently tied a rope round it
and dragged it down 54 steps to the entrance of the building.
Greek equities rally on rate cut hopes
Equities rallied on the Athens Stock Exchange on Friday fuelled by hopes of
domestic interest rate cuts following a slump in the previous session.
Market players are discounting a signal from the central bank that domestic
rates will finally fall in the wake of rate declines agreed in European
euro-zone countries.Leading the market were shares in the heavily weighted
banking sector, which were briskly traded in strong demand. The general
index ended 2.30 percent higher at 2,469.07 points, recouping the bulk of
losses from the previous session's 3.46 percent plunge. Trade was active
with turnover at 68.7 billion drachmas.
WEATHER
Cloud and rain will prevail throughout Greece today. Winds strong to very
strong, turning into gale force in the Ionian Sea and Aegean Sea. Weather
cloudy with light rain and possibility of brief storms in Athens with
temperatures from 10-16C. Similar weather in Thessaloniki with temperatures
between 8-11C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 279.774
British pound 466.280 Japanese yen (100) 235.798
French franc 49.888 German mark 167.271
Italian lira (100) 16.895 Irish Punt 415.846
Belgian franc 8.110 Finnish mark 55.026
Dutch guilder 148.398 Danish kr. 43.995
Austrian sch. 23.780 Spanish peseta 1.966
Swedish kr. 34.660 Norwegian kr. 37.696
Swiss franc 204.987 Port. Escudo 1.632
Aus. dollar 174.751 Can. dollar 181.933
Cyprus pound 562.464
(M.P.)
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