Browse through our General Nodes on Cyprus Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923) Read the Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits (24 July 1923)
HR-Net - Hellenic Resources Network Compact version
Today's Suggestion
Read The "Macedonian Question" (by Maria Nystazopoulou-Pelekidou)
HomeAbout HR-NetNewsWeb SitesDocumentsOnline HelpUsage InformationContact us
Friday, 19 April 2024
 
News
  Latest News (All)
     From Greece
     From Cyprus
     From Europe
     From Balkans
     From Turkey
     From USA
  Announcements
  World Press
  News Archives
Web Sites
  Hosted
  Mirrored
  Interesting Nodes
Documents
  Special Topics
  Treaties, Conventions
  Constitutions
  U.S. Agencies
  Cyprus Problem
  Other
Services
  Personal NewsPaper
  Greek Fonts
  Tools
  F.A.Q.
 

Macedonian Press Agency: News in English, 2001-03-01

Macedonian Press Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Macedonian Press Agency at http://www.mpa.gr and http://www.hri.org/MPA.


MACEDONIAN PRESS AGENCY NEWS IN ENGLISH
Thessaloniki, March 1, 2001

SECTIONS

  • [A] NATIONAL NEWS
  • [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS TITLES
  • [Á] NATIONAL NEWS
  • [01] STATE CAMPAIGNS TO EMPOWER GREEK WOMEN
  • [02] DETROP FOOD FAIR OPENS MARCH 2 IN THESSALONIKI
  • [03] RACIST MURDERER CONVICTED TO LIFE IN PRISON
  • [04] VLORE HOSTS MINISTERS' MEETING ON CRIME COMBAT
  • [05] GUARDS AT SCHOOL NOW A GREEK PHENOMENON, TOO
  • [06] STATE ALLAYS WORRY OVER FOOT & MOUTH DISEASE
  • [07] GREEK, TURKISH, BULGARIAN HERITAGE TALKS SOON
  • [08] GREEK MINISTER MEETS WITH DEAN OF BELGRADE U
  • [09] FIVE GREEK SHARES RANK AMONG EUROPE'S 300 BEST
  • [10] PROTEST RESOLUTION SIGNED BY 31 VLACH LOCAL ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS ON THE US STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT
  • [11] THE BELGIAN DEFENSE MINISTER MET WITH HIS GREEK COUNTERPART AND THE FOREIGN MINISTER
  • [12] THE LOSSES CONTINUE IN THE ATHENS STOCK EXCHANGE
  • [13] THE PRESIDENTS OF GREECE AND ITALY ARE IN KEFALONIA
  • [14] BETTER PROSPECTS FOR THE GREEK INVESTMENTS IN ROMANIA
  • [15] THE 3RD DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL IN THESSALONIKI
  • [16] PAPAZOI MET WITH THE DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER OF CROATIA
  • [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS
  • [17] WORLD POPULATION MAY RISE TO 10 BILLION BY 2050
  • [18] GREECE IS BEING THREATENED WITH AN AGING POPULATION

  • NEWS IN DETAIL

    [A] NATIONAL NEWS

    [01] STATE CAMPAIGNS TO EMPOWER GREEK WOMEN

    In light of the upcoming International Women's Day on March 8, the government is embarking on a national media campaign entitled "No More Women on the Sidelines", aimed at empowering women around the country and promoting gender equality.

    According to the state's secretary-general for gender equality, Efi Bekou, the initiative aims to reach out to the thousands of women in this country who live on the margins of society.

    Intending to raise awareness about women's rights and promote equal treatment of women, particularly in the workplace, the campaign will target unemployed women, single mothers, migrants, repatriated Greeks, members of cultural and religious minorities, victims of violence and those who live in remote areas.

    Television promotions, radio spots and print media advertisements have been organized by the Research Center for Gender Equality (KETHI).

    Advocating zero-tolerance for abuse against women, KETHI has branches in Thessaloniki, Patras, Volos and Iraklion.

    According to the Center's data, a total of 1,782 women, many of them migrants and refugees, sought advice and assistance from KETHI between May and December last year.

    [02] DETROP FOOD FAIR OPENS MARCH 2 IN THESSALONIKI

    The 16th international DETROP foodstuffs, beverages, machinery and equipment exhibition, organized by Helexpo, will be inaugurated tomorrow by the Minister of Agriculture George Anomeritis at Thessaloniki's exhibition center.

    The biannual fair, whose theme this year will be the benefits and quality of the Mediterranean diet, will showcase products from 498 Greek and 618 foreign exhibitors.

    This year's participation is of a larger scale compared to last year when 939 exhibitors took part, 37 percent of whom were from abroad. Bulgaria, Italy and Poland are among the featured countries, while direct foreign exhibitors are from seven countries and the indirect from 27.

    An International Wine Competition is also being held on DETROP's sidelines, aiming to present the world's quality wines and to further promote and expand the wine culture in the Mediterranean region.

    The competition is organized by the Ambelonas Vinters Union and held under the auspices of Office International de la Vigne et du Vin and several Greek wine agencies.

    The judges committee will comprise Greek and foreign wine experts, producers and journalists.

    [03] RACIST MURDERER CONVICTED TO LIFE IN PRISON

    In a majority vote ruling yesterday, an Athens court convicted a 25-year-old suspect to two counts of life imprisonment for killing two foreigners, who were unknown to him, and injuring seven others during a shooting spree in downtown Athens, in 1999.

    The court found Pantelis Kazakos guilty of two intentional homicides and seven attempted homicides, although three members of the seven-judge jury voted that the defendant had diminished capacity. The court also deprived Kazakos of his civil rights for life and fined him 300,000 drachmas.

    A retrial will be taking place in a few months time and the court will either have to uphold yesterday's verdict or decide otherwise.

    Kazakos was arrested in October 1999 after he reportedly ran amok on the streets of central Athens, gunning down anyone resembling a foreigner, especially dark-skinned ones. Two men were killed while another seven were hospitalized, at least three with severe injuries.

    [04] VLORE HOSTS MINISTERS' MEETING ON CRIME COMBAT

    The Public Order Ministers of Greece and Albania, along with the Interior Ministers of Italy and Germany, are to meet in Vlore, Albania, today in order to discuss the operation of a regional center for the combat of criminal activity.

    According to Albanian Minister of Public Order Ilir Gioni, the meeting was initiated by Albania's Premier Ilir Meta seven months ago.

    Vlore has been proposed as the center's headquarters whose aim will be to combat organized crime, drug trafficking and illegal immigration.

    [05] GUARDS AT SCHOOL NOW A GREEK PHENOMENON, TOO

    Private guards have become a familiar sight outside Greek schools, a service provided by the local authorities in 147 municipalities throughout the country under a program entitled "Safeguarding 2000".

    According to the Athens daily "To Vima", even though there are about 3,000 city-provided school guards, the measure is deemed insufficient as an increasing number of schools in the Attica basin have sought assistance from private firms, a move funded either by the municipality or the school's parents association.

    [06] STATE ALLAYS WORRY OVER FOOT & MOUTH DISEASE

    Greece's Ministry of Agriculture continues to allay the public's mounting concern over food safety in light of the recent foot and mouth disease outbreak in the United Kingdom and the t draconian prevention measures taken subsequently by continental Europe.

    Agriculture Minister George Anomeritis stated that Greece is no longer limiting examinations only to suspect livestock, stressing that consumers are not at risk of contracting the disease as systematic and thorough testing is now being conducted.

    At the same time, British authorities have announced that nine more outbreaks have been detected in England and Wales, while dozens of animals have been slaughtered in Ireland as a preventive measure.

    France's Agriculture Ministry announced that it would slaughter 30,000 sheep which had come in contact with other animals imported from England as of February 1. Germany, too, is conducting wide-ranging tests.

    [07] GREEK, TURKISH, BULGARIAN HERITAGE TALKS SOON

    The architectural and cultural heritage shared by Greece, Turkey and Bulgaria is to be the focus of a tripartite scientific meeting to be held this month in northern Greece's city of Orestiada.

    The meeting, to be held on March 10, will feature scientists from the three countries, while a noteworthy detail is that the Greeks will speak about the area's Muslim mosques and the Turks will give an address on Byzantine history.

    [08] GREEK MINISTER MEETS WITH DEAN OF BELGRADE U

    Minister of Macedonia-Thrace George Paschalides met with the dean of the University of Belgrade Maria Bogdanovic, during his two-day visit to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia as the head of a Greek business delegation.

    Among the items discussed during their talks was the reactivation of an agreement drawn in 1996 between Belgrade University and the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

    Mr. Paschalides stressed that the reconstruction of Yugoslavia may be premised on economic cooperation, but the sectors of culture and education are equally if not more significant in achieving cooperation between the two peoples.

    [09] FIVE GREEK SHARES RANK AMONG EUROPE'S 300 BEST

    Universal banking group ABN-AMRO has ranked five Greek shares, namely National Bank, Alpha Bank, commercial Bank, the Greek Telecommunications Organization (OTE) and mobile phone service provider Panafon, among Europe's 300 best.

    At the same time, analysts at Schroder Salomon Smith Barney are confident over the opportunities provided by the Greek market, noting that its low rank on the MSCI global stock indices is not a negative trait after all.

    According to SSSB, the Athens Stock Exchange (ASE) is merely three percent behind the European index, as of the start of 2001, in contrast to the continent's other small markets, i.e. Portugal, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, Ireland and Norway, that surpassed the mark during the same time period.

    It also adds that ASE is faring better than other European markets since the average price-per-earning for 2001 is estimated to rank at 14, as opposed to the European mean of 22.4.

    [10] PROTEST RESOLUTION SIGNED BY 31 VLACH LOCAL ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS ON THE US STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT

    The US State Department annual report on the human rights situation in Greece and around the world for the year 2000 caused the strong reaction of 31 Vlach-speaking mayors and village council presidents in Greece.

    They signed a protest resolution against the direct or indirect characterization of the Vlach-speaking Greeks as an ethnic, linguistic or other minority, stating that the Vlach- speaking Greeks never requested to be recognized by the Greek state as a minority, stressing that historically and culturally they were and still are an integral part of Hellenism.

    They also stress that the existence and the use of a second language idiom, which is the result of the centuries long Greek- Roman cultural heritage in the Greek mainland, does not constitute a reason that could justify its characterization as a minority language with the known political and other consequences it could entail.

    In their protest, the 31 Vlach-speaking local administration officials state that they will react strongly to any intentional misinformation campaign that falsifies the historical and current facts concerning the collective ethnic identity of the Vlach- speaking Greeks.

    [11] THE BELGIAN DEFENSE MINISTER MET WITH HIS GREEK COUNTERPART AND THE FOREIGN MINISTER

    The Belgian minister of defense, who was on a visit to Greece, met yesterday with his Greek counterpart Akis Tsochatzopoulos and foreign minister Giorgos Papandreou.

    Among the topics discussed during the Belgian minister's visit, whose country will hold the EU rotating presidency in the second half of the year, was the European Army.

    Mr. Tsochatzopoulos said that in the meeting it was stressed that the EU army infrastructure must be completed before the end of 2001 in order to be operationally ready by 2003.

    The Belgian minister of defense also met with the Greek foreign minister, who referred to the outcome of the latest NATO Summit meeting. The two men discussed the issue of the creation of a White Bible on the European defense.

    [12] THE LOSSES CONTINUE IN THE ATHENS STOCK EXCHANGE

    The losses continued in the Athens Stock Exchange today. The general index dropped to 0.59% at 3.110,59 points, while the volume of transactions was small at 134.1 million Euro or 45.68 billion drachmas.

    Of the stocks trading today, 97 recorded gains and 239 had losses, while the value of 35 stocks remained stable.

    [13] THE PRESIDENTS OF GREECE AND ITALY ARE IN KEFALONIA

    The events, on the occasion of the 58th anniversary of the massacre of 10.000 Italian soldiers by the German army in the Ionian Sea island of Kefalonia in September 1943, opened today in the presence of Greek president Kostis Stephanopoulos and his Italian counterpart Carlo Azeglio Ciampi.

    Mr. Ciampi was welcome by his Greek counterpart at the Airport of Argostoli in Kefalonia and the two presidents laid wreaths in the memory of those killed.

    [14] BETTER PROSPECTS FOR THE GREEK INVESTMENTS IN ROMANIA

    The new Bucharest government seeks closer economic cooperation between Romania and Greece and for this reason it creates the appropriate conditions for new opportunities aimed at increasing the number of Greek investments in Romania.

    Romanian minister of press Vasile Dincu, a distinguished university professor and one of the most important political personalities in his country, revealed in an exclusive interview with MPA that the Romanian government prepares a legal framework for the better protection of Greek investments in Romania.

    He also mentioned that the privatization of 17 large businesses will start soon within the framework of the efforts aimed at attracting foreign capital, while he pointed out that the overwhelming majority of the Romanian people believe that there is no risk for an armed conflict in the region.

    However, he underlined that the war in Kosovo proved that the cooperation of the Balkan states is necessary to avert the risk of conflict in the region.

    Finally, Mr. Dincu stated that when the governing Social Democracy Party of Romania decided to found the ministry of press was impressed by the Greek model and for this reason the first contact he will have will be with his Greek counterpart Dimitris Reppas.

    [15] THE 3RD DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL IN THESSALONIKI

    One hundred and one documentaries from all over the world will attempt to open a window to history, social changes, cultural evolution and human relations within the framework of Thessaloniki's 3rd Documentary Festival that will take place on March 5-11.

    A Documentary Market and a Pitching Forum will be held within the framework of the parallel events that will take place during which, the Greek producers with their colleagues from the Balkans and southern Europe will present their projects to representatives of Greek and other European television stations.

    [16] PAPAZOI MET WITH THE DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER OF CROATIA

    Greek deputy foreign minister Ms. Elisavet Papazoi and foreign ministry European affairs general secretary Elias Plasovitis met in Athens yesterday with Croatia's European integration minister Mr. Jacobcic and deputy foreign minister, Ms. Kurelec.

    In the meeting they discussed the improvement of bilateral cooperation on European Union issues and specifically, the progress made toward the adoption of the EU-Croatia stabilization and association agreement that will be a significant step in the effort for the incorporation of Croatia into the European Union structures.

    Ms. Papazoi, in statements she made after the meeting, underlined Greece's stable support to Croatia's course toward the EU, the will to strengthen cooperation by offering know-how on European issues and the potential for regional cooperation and development in the region.

    [B] INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    [17] WORLD POPULATION MAY RISE TO 10 BILLION BY 2050

    Global population could grow to between 7.8 billion and 10.9 billion people by the year 2050, according to the United Nations' "World Population Prospects" report published by the organization's Population Division.

    As the report estimates, world population - which stood at a little over six billion by mid-2000 - could be expected to rise to 9.3 billion by 2050; by 2025, the estimates are that population rates will decline in the world's more developed region while remaining positive throughout the developing world.

    The report also noted the effects of HIV/AIDS, with sub- Saharan Africa, which has been particularly hard hit, showing a lower estimated life expectancy between 1995 and 2000 (48.6 years) years than the region had 10 years ago (when life expectancy was a whole year higher, at 49.6 years).

    [18] GREECE IS BEING THREATENED WITH AN AGING POPULATION

    Greece is among the countries threatened with an aging population, according to a United Nations report on the development of the world population in the next 50 years that was given to publicity recently.

    Specifically, the report mentions that in Greece, Germany, Italy and Japan the ratio of the children to the elderly over the age of 60 will be 1/1.5 by the year 2050.

    At the same time, Greece is included among the top 19 countries in which at least 1/10 of the population will be over the age of 80 by the year 2050.


    Macedonian Press Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article
    Back to Top
    Copyright © 1995-2023 HR-Net (Hellenic Resources Network). An HRI Project.
    All Rights Reserved.

    HTML by the HR-Net Group / Hellenic Resources Institute, Inc.
    mpegr2html v1.01a run on Friday, 2 March 2001 - 15:59:14 UTC