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Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 99-01-19
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 19/01/1999 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Culture minister welcomes Parthenon Marbles efforts
- Pensioners march through city centre
- Government mum on charges against Papandreou widow
- Occupations at schools continue
- Talks on Amsterdam treaty begin
- Greece to spend 15 bln dr on Y2K
- Black Sea fibre optics contract to be signed
- Arsonists target Crete tax office
- Police nab thieves with 15 tonnes of nuts
- Equities end moderately lower
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Culture minister welcomes Parthenon Marbles efforts
Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos on Tuesday sent a letter to five Greek
Eurodeputies congratulating them on their initiative and success in getting
colleagues in Strasbourg to sign a petition calling for the return of the
Parthenon Marbles from the British Museum to Greece. In the letter,
Venizelos said the initiative enabled him to raise the issue for discussion
at the Council of Culture Ministers. On Friday, 339 of 626 European
Parliament deputies, or more than half of the assembly, signed a petition
in favour of a return of the priceless 5th century BC Parthenon friezes
from Britain. It was the third, and first successful, attempt by Greek
Eurodeputies to gather enough signatures for a formal resolution.
Pensioners march through city centre
Over 3,000 pensioners held a rally in the centre of Athens on Tuesday
followed by a march to the office of Prime Minister Costas Simitis to press
demands for real pension increases and tax relief. The pensioners arrived
at the premier's office shortly after noon and dispersed two hours later,
after a delegation failed to meet with Simitis. Initially, strong police
forces prevented pensioners' representatives from approaching the premier's
office, provoking cries of protest from the demonstrators. Following
negotiations, the delegation had talks with Deputy Minister to the PM
George Paschalidis and Social Security Deputy Minister Fivos Ioannidis.
Government mum on charges against Papandreou widow
The government declined on Tuesday to comment on the filing by an Athens
prosecutor of felony charges of fraud against Dimitra Liani-Papandreou, the
widow of former prime minister Andreas Papandreou, and three associates.
The charges, filed on Monday, relate to tax irregularities in the
acquisition of land in the northern Athens suburb of Ekali. The land was
used by Papandreou and her late husband to build a luxurious home.
Papandreou's co-defendants in the case are brothers Aristidis and Sotiris
Loumidis and businessman Yiannis Alexiou. Asked by reporters whether the
charges had any political ramifications, government spokesman Dimitris
Reppas replied: "Occupying oneself with matters which are considered to
have closed does not contribute to the smooth development of political
life. Nothing can cast a shadow over the name of Andreas Papandreou... who
wrote history and is not alive to defend himself."
Occupations at schools continue
Lyceum pupils staging a sit-in at a Thessaloniki school complex on Tuesday
set up barricades on surrounding steets and attacked television crews. The
pupils of the Euclides school complex, one of the five of 253 Thessaloniki
lyceums to be still under occupation, closed off central Alexandrou
Papanastasiou avenue for about two hours, causing a traffic jam in the
region. They also threw eggs at an ET-3 television crew covering the news
story.
Talks on Amsterdam treaty begin
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou inaugurated a series of talks
with social partners, including employers and trade unions, on Monday,
ahead of the expected ratification of the Amsterdam treaty by Parliament in
February. Parliament begins discussion of the treaty in the first half of
the month. The new treaty is seen as laying the groundwork for the entrance
of up to a dozen new members over the next decade. Papandreou on Monday met
with the presidents and representatives of major trade union groups,
including those representing civil servants, Greek telecoms organisation
OTE, farmers and the General Confederation of Workers of Greece and
the Athens Labour Centre.
Greece to spend 15 bln dr on Y2K
Greece will spend some 15 billion drachmas on dealing with the millennium
bug but work is proceeding at a very satisfactory rate, Interior Minister
Alekos Papadopoulos said on Tuesday. Papadopoulos was speaking after
chairing a high-ranking meeting on the problem. The meeting was attended by
the ministers of defence, national economy, development and transport and
communications, as well as officials from the sectors of industry, banking,
and other affected sectors. The meetings are held on a monthly basis to
coordinate work on the issue between ministries, government services and
the private sector.
Black Sea fibre optics contract to be signed
An agreement for the construction and maintenance of a Black Sea underwater
fibre optics telecommunications system linking seven countries in the
region is to be signed Wednesday at a central Athens hotel. The signing
will be attended by the Transport and Communications ministry leadership
and representatives of the telecommunications authorities of Greece (OTE),
Armenia, Bulgaria, Russia, Ukraine, Cyprus and Slovenia.
Arsonists target Crete tax office
Arsonists set fire to a local tax office in Iraklion, Crete, early on
Tuesday, causing property damage but no injuries. Fire department officials
said the arsonists gained entry to the first floor office in Hersonissos
through a window early on Tuesday and doused the office with fuel which
they then set alight. The fire caused damage to computers and office
furnishings but failed to damage tax records, which were locked in a
cupboard. Authorities are seeking the culprits.
Police nab thieves with 15 tonnes of nuts
Police in the northern Greek town of Veria on Tuesday arrested two men
involved in the theft of 15 tonnes of nuts worth 30 million drachmas from a
Larissa warehouse last week. Police identified the ringleader as Alexandros
Feim, 33, who with two accomplices who are still being sought, stole the
goods and passed them on to Faedon Timini, 47, from Veria, who was also
arrested. With the help of the owner of the goods, Mihalis Triantafyllou,
who posed as a prospective buyer of the nuts, police raided Timini's
warehouse, arrested him and confiscated six tonnes of pistachio nuts, eight
tonnes of almonds, and 500 kilos of hazlenuts.
Equities end moderately lower
Greek equities ended moderately lower on Tuesday as profit taking reversed
Monday's rally on the Athens Stock Exchange. The general index ended 0.89
percent off to 2,960.85 although it temporarily surpassed the 3,000 level
early in the day. Turnover was 99.7 billion drachmas and volume 21,335,000
shares. Sector indices suffered losses. Banks fell 0.34 percent, Leasing
plunged 4.39 percent, Insurance dropped 3.42 percent, Investment fell 1.31
percent, Construction rose 0.56 percent, Industrials eased 0.95 percent,
Miscellaneous ended 0.37 percent down and Holding fell 1.59 percent.
WEATHER
Mostly fair weather will prevail throughout Greece today with low
temperatures and the possibility of light rain in the east and south, the
Cycladic islands and northern Crete. Winds, variable, moderate to strong,
turning gale force in the Aegean Sea. Overcast in Athens with temperatures
between 5-13C. Mostly fair in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 1-
10C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Tuesday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 277.125
Pound sterling 458.304 Japanese yen (100) 241.423
French franc 48.921 German mark 164.075
Italian lira (100) 16.573 Irish Punt 407.462
Belgian franc 7.955 Finnish mark 53.972
Dutch guilder 145.619 Danish kr. 43.102
Austrian sch. 23.321 Spanish peseta 1.929
Swedish kr. 35.323 Norwegian kr. 37.152
Swiss franc 199.918 Port. Escudo 1.601
Aus. dollar 175.981 Can. dollar 181.536
Cyprus pound 557.988
(M.P.)
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