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A year after Grexit scare, Greece faces Brexit fallout

June 25, 2016 By administrator

0,,19356576_303,00One of the EU’s most fragile economies is bracing for fallout from Britain’s referendum. Greece has become ground zero for the EU’s experiments – from austerity to refugee distribution. Omaira Gill reports from Athens.

There has been little sympathy for the EU in a country that is constantly faced with the effects of its policies – from a six-year economic crisis to an unresolved refugee crisis. Despite this, the news that Britain has chosen to exit the European Union was largely met with stunned surprise in Greece.

There were storms across the United Kingdom on Thursday, but in Athens a warm summer’s night saw in the results of the referendum. In the end, the Brexit succeeded where a threatened Grexit had not. It was just under a year ago that Greece held an ill-fated referendum against EU austerity policies, and the reaction in Athens to the looming Brexit has been mixed.

Some Greeks feel that Brits were right to make a break for independence from the European Union. Others are more cautious. They feel that Britain has taken an unnecessary gamble: The European Union may be flawed, but it still beats the alternative, and the predicted domino effect from the Brexit may well have a negative impact on the economy of Greece – a country that is in no position to suffer any further blows.

‘The democratic decision’

As Thursday night unfolded and the Brexit began to appear more and more likely, the pound plunged to a 31-year low against the dollar. Dawn broke with the state TV channel ERT playing looping footage of Nigel Farage declaring victory “without a single bullet being fired” and debates about the UK Independence Party leader’s poor choice of words.

On news channels, bleary-eyed analysts discussed the European Union’s health and how Greece might re-evaluate its business relationship with the UK in light of the result – especially in relation to the vital shipping and tourism sectors. Silence took over at various points, with presenters unable to hide their surprise as more results came in in favor of Brexit.

“We need to fully respect the democratic decision of the British people,” Dimitris Papadimoulis, who leads the ruling Syriza party’s delegation to the European Parliament and had taken a staunchly anti Brexit stance, told DW. “Nonetheless, we should admit that it takes strong efforts and hard work from progressive and democratic forces to shift the decline of the EU’s common values and rise of far-right parties.”

“The left should be standing firm on this big challenge as neoliberal and austerity policies have completely failed,” Papadimoulis said. “The EU must change: Otherwise, it will face the risk of dissolution.”

Market turbulence

Fifty-three-year-old Christina Gregson has lived in Greece since 1994 and teaches at an Athens private school. In the buildup to the referendum, she had favored a Brexit based on living through the fallout from the European Union’s econominc policies toward Greece, but at the same time had been concerned about what a Brexit might mean for the 45,000 or so British citizens living in Greece.

“The EU, and Germany especially, have failed because they have consistently used a tone with Britain that was autocratic and bullying,” Gregson said on Friday, after waking to the news that the Brexit had in fact succeeded. “That worked on Greece because it’s tiny and poor. But ‘Project Fear’ and project ‘Do as You’re Told by Brussels – We Rule You’ was and is a recipe for disaster.”

Another major concern for Greeks, residents of other EU nations and Brits alike is the market volatility that began before the successful Brexit vote was finalized.

“The problem is the economy and financial markets,” the eurozone analyst Yannis Koutsomitis told DW. “We know that Greece is the weak link in the financial structure of the eurozone right now. If there are disruptions, Greece will be affected and is affected – because we see today that Greek bond yields are surging again, and also the Greek stock market has been hit hard.

“I would expect also some period of uncertainty about Greece’s investments because I’d expect that in such turbulence investors will be very reluctant to expose themselves to new projects, especially in countries that are not very stable yet. We have to see what the reaction will be.”

The Athens Stock Exchange was down over 13 percent by the end of trading on Friday, but there was a more immediate concern on the streets of the capital. Britons have long been some of the country’s most faithful visitors. Data from the Bank of Greece stated that arrivals from the UK rose 14.7 percent last year. With the sterling hitting all-time lows on Friday, many are worried about what effect Britons’ decreased spending power might have on Greece, which cannot afford any damage to its one economic strength: the tourism sector.

It appeared to be business as usual in the tourist district of Plaka on Friday. People strolled the streets and shopped for souvenirs. Michelle, 37, an administration employee from Warrington who did not want her last name used, had voted by post to leave the European Union. In fact, 54.3 percent of voters in her district favored leaving. “I do think the media are biased and making us out to be demons,” Michelle said. “We’re not. I think a lot of people in Europe are upset, thinking that we don’t like them, when that’s not true.

“We wanted to distance ourselves from the bureaucracy and the politics of the EU – not the people. And that’s what we need to get across.”

Though rumors were circulating on social media that British tourists were having difficulty exchanging sterling for euros, Michelle said she had not experienced that. British ATM cards appeared to be working normally.

Emmanuela Mathioudaki, a 50-year-old who owns a jewelry shop in Plaka, said she wasn’t worried that the falling pound might affect business. She said it had been years anyway since she had experienced the volume of customers she used to. “I think Britain did the right thing,” Mathioudaki said. “When the European Union isn’t operating as a union, it’s better to break it up and see what happens. There are always consequences – let’s see those, too.”

Friday felt something like a replay of Greece’s own recent political past. There was an unprecedented referendum; a prime minister resigned. Britain’s referendum exposed deep divisions in society, and now the country must work on rebuilding trust with its bitterly disappointed EU partners. That’s pretty close to the position Greece found itself in about this time last year.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: fallout, Greece, Grexit

Greece: historic appointment of orthodoxy, without the Russian patriarch

June 21, 2016 By administrator

arthodoxy churchesThe large Orthodox Council, an unprecedented meeting since a millennium supposed to seal the unity of Orthodox Christian churches around the world, opened on Sunday in Crete, but weakened by several absences, including that of the booming Russian Patriarch Kirill.

Sunday, the day of the Orthodox Pentecost kick the council was given by a “divine liturgy” (Mass) celebrated town in Heraklion, the capital of the island, ten primates, including the Ecumenical Patriarch Constantinople Bartholomew, who has an honorary primacy of his peers. Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos attended the Mass, broadcast live by state television ERT.

Prepared for over fifty years, and without precedent since the historic 1054 schism between Rome and Constantinople, the great Council aims to strengthen the Orthodox ranks. But the family picture remains incomplete, and the work that must continue until June 27 in Chania (northwest of Crete) will be marked by four absences.

Besides Patriarch Kirill with the Russian Church weighs demographically for half the Orthodox communion with nearly 130 million members, will also be absent Primates of Antioch, Bulgaria, and Georgia. The blow is hard for the instigators of appointment, chief among them Patriarch Bartholomew, whose influence is challenged for years by the Russian Church.

Absentee expressed at the last moment, citing essentially procedural issues, despite the green light they had first given to holding the appointment. “The unity of Orthodoxy is good for us all. These are the missing who will lose, “said Nikos Kotzias, the Foreign Minister of Greece, where Orthodoxy is qualified by the formation of” dominant religion “.

Pope Francis, in his prayer on Sunday afternoon on the Place Saint-Pierre, prayed for the great Orthodox council. “Let us join our Orthodox brethren, invoking the Holy Spirit to assist with his gifts patriarchs, archbishops and bishops assembled in council,” he said before reciting a crowd with a ” Hail Mary “in Italian. “This great and holy council will carry the message of unity,” said for his part Patriarch Bartholomew from Crete, quoted by the media.

Estimated at about 250 million followers, the “Orthodox communion” consists of 14 autocephalous churches, shaken by the upheavals in the former Soviet bloc and the Middle East, and frequently plagued by national and political strife.

The participants, hundreds of bishops and advisers must validate six documents rather consensual supposed to update the Orthodox witness, make it audible and managing relations with the rest of the Christian world. A “final message” must also be issued after the work.

Tuesday, June 21, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: churches, Greece, Orthodoxy

Impossible to Ensure European Security ‘Without Cooperation With Russia”

May 27, 2016 By administrator

greece pm russiaGreek PM Alexis Tsipras in an exclusive interview with Sputnik said that European security cannot be achieved without Russia.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — Ensuring security in Europe without dialogue and cooperation with Russia is impossible, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told Sputnik.

“European security cannot be achieved without cooperation and dialogue with Russia,” Tsipras said.

He also said that Europe cannot move forward while caught in a vicious circle of sanctions, militarization and Cold War rhetoric.

“I don’t believe that we can move forward or ensure compliance with international law while caught in a vicious circle of sanctions, militarization and Cold War rhetoric,” Tsipras said.

Moreover, the Greek Prime Minister called on the EU to resume talks on easing the EU visa regime for Russian nationals.

“We overcame all the difficulties that arose due to changes in the issuance of Schengen visas, strengthened the work of our consulates in Russia by attracting dozens of new employees, and we are ready to meet the high demand of Russian nationals for travel to Greece. At the same time, I find it necessary, as I have already mentioned at a European level, that dialogue is relaunched on easing the visa regime for Russian citizens,” Tsipras said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: cooperation, European, Greece, Russian, Security

Putin visits Greece for energy, investment talks

May 27, 2016 By administrator

Putin in greeceRussian President Vladimir Putin made his first trip to a European Union country this year Friday with a visit to Greece that will include a stop at a secluded Christian Orthodox monastic sanctuary in the country’s north.

Under heavy security, Putin arrived for a two-day visit expected to focus on energy cooperation and Russian investments during talks with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.

Athens is keen to maintain its traditionally close ties with post-Soviet Russia, despite its participation in European Union sanctions against Moscow, and a gas pipeline project designed to limit Russia’s regional energy dominance.

Putin was met at Athens Airport by Defense Minister Panos Kammenos as air force F-16s buzzed overhead as part of a welcoming ceremony.

Russia is one of Greece’s main trading partners, but business has been hit by the sanctions and drop in commodity prices.

Greece is also keen to reverse a slump in tourist arrivals from Russia last year.

“This will be the first time Putin has visited an EU country in the past six months and Russia-EU relations will be definitely on the agenda,” said Alexander Kokcharov of the U.S.-based IHS Country Risk group.

“Putin is likely to offer investment projects in Greece, most likely in energy and transport sectors. However, we do not expect that Greece would go against the EU consensus.”

Some 2,500 police will provide security for Putin’s visit in Athens, and much of the city center will be blocked to motorists and public transport.

On Saturday, Putin will visit the Monastery of St. Panteleimon, which is inhabited by Russian monks. It’s set in the 1,000-year-old Mount Athos autonomous monastic community, from which women are banned.

He will be accompanied by the head of Russias Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, who arrived in northern Greece on Friday.

[AP]

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: energy, Greece, investment, Putin, talks, visits

Putin visits Greece ahead of Russia sanctions vote

May 27, 2016 By administrator

putin greece visit

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras © Alexander Zemlianichenko / Reuters

The Russian President makes his first EU trip in seven months with a visit to Athens on Friday. It comes just a month before Brussels decides on whether to extend EU sanctions against Russia.

Before the visit, Putin published an article in Greece’s Kathimerini newspaper, where he spoke about the negative effect of mutual sanctions.

“These days, Greece is Russia’s important partner in Europe. Unfortunately, the decline in relations between Russia and the European Union stands in the way of further strengthening our cooperation, with an adverse effect on the dynamics of bilateral trade that fell by a third to $2.75 billion as compared to last year. Particularly affected were Greek agricultural producers,” Putin said.

In 2015 trade between the two countries fell by 33.7 percent to about $2.8 billion. Ninety percent of that loss was exports from Russia to Greece. Russian imports from Greece decreased by 54 percent and amounted to $229.4 million.

Putin’s visit to Greece breaks a long pause in his travels to Western countries. Last time he went to the EU was November 30 last year, when he took part in the UN climate conference in Paris.

Over the past year the Greek leadership has criticized the EU’s anti-Russian sanctions, but has never used its right to veto their extension. According to some analysts, Athens is playing the Russian card to persuade Brussels and international lenders towards a softer position on its €320 billion debt.

Experts have also said that historical ties with Greece could help Russia find an ally who could help to ease the sanctions.

“The extreme political and economic disruption Greece has experienced, in combination with existing cultural ties, make it a particularly attractive target for these kind of initiatives,” Daragh McDowell, a principal analyst for Europe and Central Asia at Verisk Maplecroft, told CNBC.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ahead, Greece, Putin, Russi sanctions, visits

Istanbul Orthodox Council moved from Turkey to Greece over Russia crisis

April 19, 2016 By administrator

MURAT YETKİN

murat.yetkin@hurriyet.com.tr

A historical meeting bringing together representatives of 300 million Orthodox Christians, which had been due to be held in Istanbul this year after centuries away, has been shifted to the Greek island of Crete. The move came after the RussianOrthodox Church indicated that it did not want to come to Turkey due to the crisis between the two countries over the downing of a Russian jet that violated the Turkish-Syrian border last year, GreekOrthodox Patriarch Bartholomew told a group of journalists on April 18.

The Pan-Orthodox Council, or the Holy and Great Synod of the Orthodox Church as it is officially referred to, will be held in Crete on June 17-27. The first Pan-Orthodox Council is highly anticipated, as it has been planned ever since 1961.

The Patriarch explained that the last equivalent of such a Council, the “Ecumenical Council,” was held in Nicaea (İznik in today’s Turkey) in the year 787, centuries before the Eastern and Western Churches were split in the Schism of 1054.

“Then there were only four churches. Now in Orthodoxy we have 14 churches, led by us in Istanbul. This is going to be their first joint meeting,” Patriarch Bartholomew said. Other Churches from east and west, including the Catholic Church in the Vatican, will be sending observers to the Crete Council.

In a 2014 conference in Istanbul, it was agreed to hold the Council at the Hagia Irene church-museum in Istanbul, which was built before the neighboring Hagia Sophia in the 4th century, and which was also the first house of the Orthodox Patriarchate. However, Patriarchate officials say they received a message in late December 2015 that said Patriarch Kirill of the RussianOrthodox Church in Moscow did not find it appropriate to hold the Council meeting in Istanbul. This message came amid a political crisis between Russia and Turkey over the downing of a Russian jet by the Turkish army. The Russian jet was downed and its pilot was killed on Nov. 24, after violating Turkey’s border with Syria, where Russia was helping the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria’s civil war. The RussianOrthodox Church, founded in the 16th century, is known to be in competition with the GreekOrthodox Church, following the capture of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453 and its renaming as Istanbul.

“The content of our mission is religious, not political,” Bartholomew said. “We have moved the Council meeting from Istanbul to Crete in order not to cancel it. This is an historic meeting. We have important topics to discuss and will be making the first declaration to the world as the Orthodox faith.” Dr. Konstantinos Delikostantis, an advisor to Bartholomew, said there are six topics to be discussed at the Council: The problems faced by the Orthodox diaspora, the problems of autonomous churches, dietary rules in Orthodoxy, marriage and family, relations with non-Orthodox Christians, and the stance of the Orthodox Church regarding contemporary developments in today’s world – from the environment to technology, from human rights and individualism to what Delikonstantis described as “contemporary sins.”

Meanwhile, Bartholomew also said he has requested an appointment with Turkish President Tayyip Erdoğan to update him on the situation and to discuss issues faced by the tiny Greek minority in Turkey, including the long-demanded re-opening of the Halki Seminary on Heybeliada island near Istanbul.

April/19/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: council, Greece, moved f, orthodox, Turkey

Greece: Pope brings 12 Syrian refugees back with him after Lesbos visit

April 16, 2016 By administrator

http://gagrule.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/pope-greece-visit.mp4

In a clear signal to Europe, Pope Francis has allowed three refugee families to accompany him on his charter plane. Francis was on the Greek island of Lesbos to shed light on the refugees’ plight.

The Vatican said on Saturday that Francis’ decision was a “gesture of welcome” for the hundreds of thousands of refugees that have arrived on the Greek island of Lesbos as they flee war and poverty in the Middle East, Central Asia and Afghanistan.

Three families – two from Damascus and one from the “Islamic State”-held Deir el-Zour – accompanied the pope on his charter plane to Italy. The group of refugees totaled 12 people, including the six children.

“Today I renew my heartfelt plea for responsibility and solidarity in the face of this tragic situation,” Francis said.

A ‘common humanity’

Lots were drawn to decide which individuals would be allowed to go with the pope, reported DW correspondent Bernd Riegert, who was on the scene as the plane departed.

The refugee families, which include six children, are to be taken in by the Vatican and will be initially cared for by the Rome-based lay community of Sant’Egidio.

An emotional meeting

Overwhelmed by the Francis’ visit, refugees reportedly sobbed and fell to their knees in his presence. Some even reportedly asked to be blessed by him.

After the visit, Francis had lunch with some of the refugees and then, along with the head of the Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, and the head of the Orthodox Church of Greece, Athens Archbishop Ieronymos II, signed a declaration calling for their protection.

Refugees were also seen holding signs emblazoned with slogans such as “Pope you are our hope,” “please save Yazidi people,” “we are also human” and “Welcome Pope Francis.”

blc/rc (AP, Reuters, AFP)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 12 syrian, Greece, Pope, refugees, Syria refugees resort to Istanbul streets (Video)

Turkey problem with every neighbore, Turkish jets enter Greek air space for second day

April 12, 2016 By administrator

turkish_jets_web-thumb-largeTurkish fighter jets violated Greek air space for the second time in as many days Tuesday, fueling concern in military and diplomatic circles.

Just after 8 a.m. two Turkish F-16s entered the Athens Flight Information Region between Lesvos and Chios and flew over the islet of Oinousses.

About an hour later, one Turkish F-16 entered the same area of Greek air space and also flew over Oinousses.

In both cases, the Turkish jets were chased off by Greek aircraft.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: enter, Greece, jet, problem, Turkey, Turkish

Russian tourists Flocking Bulgaria, Greece boycotting terrorist state of Turkey

March 20, 2016 By administrator

n_96676_1Both Greece and Bulgaria, two of Turkey’s neighbors, have stepped forward to lure Russian tourists, who have abstained from their most popular destination as part of Moscow sanctions on Ankara due to the downing of Russian military plane last November.

Greece has started granting three-year visas for Russian tourists with a single-day procedure, as Bulgaria has lowered its visa fees, according to information gathered by daily Milliyet.

Last year, some 3.5 million Russian tourists visited Turkey, where they enjoyed visa-free travel. Many of them chose “all-inclusive” packages offered by hotels in the country’s Mediterranean and Aegean resorts.

Oleg Safonov, the head of the Russian Tourism Agency, told RSN, a Moscow-based radio, that Bulgaria and Greece were in action to replace Turkey.

Greece has opened new visa offices in Russia and employed more staff, in a bid to break a 2013 record of 1.5 million Russian visitors, he said.

Bulgaria, meanwhile, has stopped demanding fingerprints from Russian visitors.

Ankara and Moscow have been at odds since Turkey downed a Russian fighter jet operating in Syria on Nov 24, 2015, for insistent violation of its airspace.

Scheduled flights between Russia and Turkey by the two countries’ flag carriers have dropped almost 50 percent along with the number of passengers after the downing of Russian jet since then, a Turkish tourism executive said last week.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Bulgaria, Flocking, Greece, Russian tourists

Islamic State of Turkey slams Armenia, Greece, over “joint hostility” in Genocide remarks

March 19, 2016 By administrator

208482The Turkish Foreign Ministry on Friday, March 18 accused Greece and Armenia of demonstrating “joint hostility” towards Turkey during Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s official visit to Athens earlier this week, RFE/RL Armenian Service reports.

The ministry spokesman, Tanju Bilgic, condemned references to the World War One-era mass killings of Armenians and Greeks in Ottoman Turkey by Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras during their meetings with Sargsyan.

At a joint news conference with the Armenian leader, Tsipras spoke of Greeks’ and Armenians’ “history of suffering and persecution,” saying that both peoples were victims of genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks. Pavlopoulos stated, in turn, that “at the beginning of the 20th century the two peoples endured tragic moments for the same reason.”

“The statements in question are the product of a pathetic mentality proving that the relations and solidarity between Greece and Armenia is built upon a joint hostility and slander against the Turkish identity,” a Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

“Turkey and the Turkish people will never give credit to those bringing to the fore at every opportunity a dictum of history which is unlawful, one-sided and obsessive,” he added in the statement.

Official Yerevan rejected the Turkish criticism on Friday. “The centuries-old friendship between the Armenian and Greek peoples is based on their interwoven fate and mutual support,” said Tigran Balayan, the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman. “Making denialism the pivot of state policy does not rid Turkey of the responsibility to face its own history.” Greece officially recognized the 1915 Armenian massacres in Ottoman Turkey as genocide in 1999. In 2014, it also enacted a law making it a crime to publicly deny this and other genocides.

The Armenian parliament unanimously passed last year a resolution condemning “the genocide of Greeks and Assyrians perpetrated in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1923.”

Read also:OSCE most efficient platform for Karabakh settlement: Greek President

Related links:

RFE/RL Armenian Service: Turkey Slams Greece, Armenia Over ‘Joint Hostility’

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenia, Greece, slams, Turkey, “joint hostility”

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