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Cyprus Mail: News Articles in English, 03-02-13

Cyprus Mail: News Articles in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Cyprus Mail at <http://www.cyprus-mail.com/>


Thursday, February 13, 2003

CONTENTS

  • [01] Papadopoulos hits back as investors reveal CSE probeBy Sofia KannasTHE CYPRUS Investors' Association yesterday made public the results of a criminal investigation by the Attorney-general office, implicating presidential candidate Tassos Papadopoulos in a company accused of defrauding investors of millions of pounds.But Papadopoulos' campaign team dismissed the allegations as pre-electoral mud-slinging, saying their candidate had nothing to hide.The contents of the report, which was completed and submitted to the Attorney-general's office on December 16 last year, were revealed at a news conference yesterday.The President of the Investor's Association Demetris Hadjipapas said investigations into Claridge Investments Ltd. had been carried out over a 15-month period, examining suspicions that 12 company members, including board member Papadopoulos, were guilty of defrauding investors.“Shares in the company were deliberately split in order to allow major shareholders the opportunity to sell shares to the public and make financial gains at the investing public's expense,” Hadjipapas said.He added it was “unthinkable” for a presidential candidate to be suspected of committing a series of serious criminal offences connected to the CSE scandal.“How can we continue investigations if he becomes President of the Republic?” he asked.The criminal investigation report itself was damning of the 14 suspects accused of defrauding the public:“We (the criminal investigators) agree with the view of the investors that this is a case of a premeditated trap which led to the defrauding of the investing public as well as developments in the Cyprus stock market.”The Association's Secretary-general Pantelis Nicolaides told the Cyprus Mail the report clearly implied there was a conspiracy on the part of major shareholders and board members.“The case now goes to the Attorney-general, and our question is what are they going to do about the suspects, including Tassos Papadopoulos? It would be strange if he was elected on Sunday facing these charges.”The suspects, 14 in total, have not yet been questioned about the alleged splitting of shares, pending instructions from the Attorney-general.Nicolaides said the Association had sent a letter to Deputy Attorney-general Petros Clerides voicing their concern over the case.“We sent him a letter yesterday but we haven't had a response yet. We will await one.” Clerides yesterday said he was unfamiliar with the report and the investigations carried out.“I am not aware of the case,” he said.Meanwhile, presidential candidate and Attorney- general Alecos Markides defended suggestions that the report should have been made public sooner.“It was impossible to process the findings of the investigation in a few days, especially with the Christmas and New Year holidays. And I was not involved in the legal service after January 4.”Markides also played down Papadopoulos' alleged involvement in the case.“Personally, I never thought this investigation concerned Mr Papadopoulos himself… I knew he was the legal advisor for the company in question but it has not been established that he actually sold shares during the critical period.”Responding to the allegations in a statement yesterday, Papadopoulos' spokesman Marios Karoyian said the announcement by the Association was an example of “pre-election mud slinging.”Karoyian defended the presidential candidate, saying: “Mr Papadopoulos has nothing to fear and nothing to hide… He has answered questions in detail on this subject and has made it clear that he has not sold any Claridge shares.”But the Chairman of the House Watchdog Committee, Christos Pourgourides, suggested that it didn't matter whether Papadopoulos sold shares or not.“If Mr Papadopoullos has or hasn't sold any shares personally has no relevance whatsoever. “Friends and associates on the Board and companies of friends and relatives of his wife have sold shares and have allegedly defrauded the public,” he said in a statement.
  • [02] Third plan only with give and takeBy George PsyllidesTHE GOVERNMENT said yesterday a third version of the United Nations settlement plan for Cyprus would only be submitted if there was a give and take procedure during ongoing talks between the two sides.Government Spokesman Michalis Papapetrou said the government agreed with Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou's assertion that an effort for give and take had to precede a third revised plan.Papapetrou suggested that in the absence of such a procedure, any changes to the current plan would be insignificant, since no one could unilaterally change anything to make it favourable for either side.The Government Spokesman repeated that he could not confirm whether UN Secretary-general Kofi Annan would be visiting the island at the end of the month, adding that despite the information, there was no official notice concerning the matter.On Tuesday, Greek Government Spokesman Christos Protopapas said Annan would visit Cyprus at the end of this month, following visits to Turkey and Greece.“We have information; we don't have any official notice,” Papapetrou said.He added that the government would take the issue up with UN special envoy Alvaro de Soto when he returned today or tomorrow.Commenting on Attorney-general Alecos Markides' suggestion that a third plan would be in a take-it-or-leave-it form, Papapetrou said Markides was voicing his own opinion.He said President Glafcos Clerides had a different view on the matter and, through public comments, the President wanted to send certain messages.Regarding the talks between Greece and Turkey on security issues in Cyprus, Papapetrou said it was important that Turkey, which had refused to talk on several occasions in the past, was now willing to discuss the matter.Papapetrou said the government was in “full and close contact” with the Greek government and there was “common planning, common positions and common understanding” on how the issue should be handled.The UN has called on the NATO allies to press ahead with ironing out any security aspects of the blueprint before the UN's February 28 deadline.“The negotiations, according to our suggestion, should start as soon as possible, next week,” Greek Foreign Ministry Spokesman Panos Beglitis said in Athens yesterday.Beglitis told a news briefing that Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou had sent a letter to his Turkish counterpart Yassar Yakis inviting Turkey to start talks on Cyprus-related security issues.He said Greece suggested high- ranking foreign ministry officials and military experts from both sides should take part in the talks that would be held in Athens and Ankara alternately.
  • [03] Leaders lashed for media interventionsBy a Staff ReporterPRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Tassos Papadopoulos and the leader of AKEL Demetris Christofias, were both on the receiving end of a barrage of condemnation yesterday for intervening in the work of journalists and hindering the freedom of speech.Christofias, whose party is backing Papadopoulos' ticket, on Tuesday interrupted a live prime-time radio show on state-controlled CyBC to reprimand the presenter for not doing her job properly because, as he claimed, she was asking the foreign minister 'loaded' questions.On the same day Papadopoulos threatened a television station he would pull out of a live interview if a specific journalist were not taken off the panel.At the same time Papadopoulos' staff issued an announcement accusing a second journalist, who had taken part in a television interview on Monday, of launching a “defamatory attack” against their candidate.During the interview the journalist pointed out to Papadopoulos that his education policy document contained numerous spelling and syntax mistakes and wondered whether they were going to be employed at the education ministry if he were elected president.Papadopoulos' staff conceded there were four or five typos, which they said was normal.In a counter statement the journalist maintained that he was ready to indicate many more grammatical errors than just four or five.Yesterday, AKEL's mouthpiece Haravghi, launched a scathing attack against the journalist, charging that he was under the orders of the presidential palace and DISY chief Nicos Anastassiades.Government spokesman Michalis Papapetrou urged Papadopoulos and his supporters not to let the election carry them away into practices and mentalities of the past.“I express my sadness and disappointment because yesterday's (Tuesday's) incident, where Christofias exerted pressure on a CyBC reporter, was not an isolated one.“In three instances, attempts were made to put pressure on journalists - and these are only those which saw the public light,” Papapetrou said.The spokesman said it was unacceptable to use pressure to decide who would interview candidates, noting that he could have filed many libel suits against specific newspapers but he chose not to because a politician should be tolerant of such practises.The journalists union yesterday censured both leaders' actions, stressing that journalists rejected any attempts made to intervene, influence, pressure, blackmail, threaten or gag the media. The union expressed its worry and displeasure at the interventions from politicians and other circles in the work of journalists.Attorney-general Alecos Markides condemned the phenomenon and described it as a “worrying sign of the mentality of those supposedly supporting change”.“Such practices are not only directed against journalists but are especially aimed at a every person's freedom of speech and expression,” Markides said.He added: “Is this the change Mr Papadopoulos and the parties which support him want to bring to the country?”DISY spokesman Tasos Mitsopoulos said these “phenomena were indicative of an authoritarian and dated mentality, which take us back to politicians of other eras”.“It is with sadness that we see a presidential candidate wanting to impose the journalists of his liking and decide who would be opposite him every time,” Mitsopoulos said.Commenting on his demand to remove a journalist from the panel, Papadopoulos said he had the right to protect himself and the matter had nothing to do with the freedom of speech. He said the newspaper the particular journalist worked for wrote abusive articles with twisted facts aiming to hurt him.Concerning the mistakes in his education programme, Papadopoulos said his staff simply wrote a letter indicating that his 14- page pamphlet contained four typos and one syntax error.
  • [04] Cyprus to keep abreast of EU implant guidelinesBy Stefanos EvripidouTHE EUROPEAN Parliament is drafting a resolution setting down strict rules and guidelines on breast implant surgery, including the introduction of national registers and passports. If acted upon, these rules will be adopted in Cyprus where chest-enhancing operations have hit the thousands - for both sexes. Plastic surgeon Dr Alecos Kammitsis was the first person to introduce breast implants to Cyprus in 1975. He told the Cyprus Mail that since then, thousands of people had had breasts implants, adding that ninety-nine per cent were for cosmetic purposes. The draft report on Community and national measures in relation to breast implants was compiled by the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Consumer Policy. It sets out measures to ensure patients are provided with adequate information, correct procedures and appropriate products for breast implant surgery, while calling for better information on quality control and research.Doctors will be obliged to provide full and reliable information on the procedures and initiate a clear, informed discussion of the implications of breast implant surgery. The report calls on national authorities to establish a register system to enable both producers and patients to be traced. Counselling after the operation and check-ups at least once a year are also advocated by the committee. Advertising needs to be regulated to avoid inflating demand for implants among men and women without providing balanced information. The paper also requests that advertising for "cosmetic surgery" should carry clear bold health warnings. The focus should be an acceptance of persons as they are, “rather than allowing unregulated advertising practices to impose an ideal conception of beauty as the norm”.Implant recipients will hold a passport under committee recommendations, in which details of the implant and aftercare measures are indicated, while the passport will act as proof of consent for the operation.Kammitsis maintains that the content used in breast implants is continually improving. “The main problem arises with the technique used rather than the content. It is the outer part of the implant which has been known to leak, not the inner content,” he said.“But implants have improved a lot and I have never come across any problems in my experience,” said Kammitsis. Currently, there are no standards on implants in Cyprus. “We are waiting for the EU to complete their studies and recommendations and then we will adopt them ourselves,” he said. “Basically, they are asking doctors fully to inform the patient what is to be done and make sure they understand.”Kammitsis said that the majority of people enlarging their breasts were young women between 20 and 40 years of age. The number of men asking for the operation was in the hundreds, he added. “Personally I have performed 40 operations on men,” he said.“There are minor risks to the operation but a lot depends on the technique used by the doctor. Their life- span is not fixed. As long as they are doing alright, they don't need replacing. One of my patients has had hers for 27 years,” he added.However, to avoid loosening the breast, post-natal women are warned not to breast feed if they want to maintain the aesthetic effect.
  • [05] Tests show lead poisoning killed flamingosBy Alex MitaTHE VETERINARY Services said yesterday they believed the recent death of 20 flamingos at the Larnaca salt lake was caused by lead poisoning.The head of the veterinary services Klitos Andreou told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that scientists who carried out post mortem examinations on the dead birds had found large quantities of lead pellets fired at a clay pigeon range close to the lake.“We believe the birds swallowed pellets fired from the range,” he said adding it would only take a small amount of lead to poison the birds. “These birds feed on shrimps from the bottom of the lake and at night they congregate at the centre of the lake,” Andreou said.“Their beaks are specially designed to sieve the mud and water from the lake bed leaving only the shrimp and plankton in their beaks which they swallow. But because the pellets are small they stay in the beak and are swallowed -- and lead is a really toxic metal.” “The symptoms we have seen so far lead to the assumption that lead poisoning is the cause of death.”But Andreou cautioned the Veterinary Services' findings were based only on preliminary examinations.“We have sent mud and water samples for toxicological and forensic examination and I am sure the results will shed more light into the issue,” Andreou said. House Environment Committee president George Lillikas of AKEL told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that if it was lead poisoning that had killed the flamingos then the entire salt lake would have to be thoroughly cleaned.“It is still unclear whether the death of the birds was caused by lead poisoning, but if that is the case, the entire salt lake should be emptied and cleaned to prevent more deaths, something that would cost a lot of money,” Lillikas said, pledging to have the shooting range removed from the area.“We will bring the matter up when the House reopens after the elections and we will do everything within our power to see whether we can have the clay pigeon range removed or have the shooters fire in another direction so the pellets don't fall into the salt lake,” Lillikas said. Green Party deputy George Perdikis said yesterday it was high time the shooting range as well as other issues around the salt lake were addressed by the government in order to safeguard the future of the birds.“That shooting range is illegal,” he claimed.“We have been saying this all the time but I will say it again, the government does not care. They don't care about the sewage pipe that will be built around the lake and they don't care that the airport has taken over some of the area designated for the wetlands.”Perdikis said the greens had taken their own samples and sent them for examination.“We cannot at this time be certain that the death of the flamingos was caused by the lead pellets,” he said.“However, we will wait for the results of our examination and then we will act. If the cause of the problem is the shooting range then I can't wait until we have enough money to buy a bulldozer and tear the whole place down.”
  • [06] One missing as bad weather floods rivers and blocks roadsBy Tania KhadderA 60-YEAR-OLD bus driver was missing last night after his vehicle was swept away by a river which broke its banks due to the heavy rains, police said.The man had just dropped off his passengers - mainly pupils - at around 7pm, when his mini-bus was swept by the Yialias river in Pera Horio Nisou near Nicosia.Information on the situation was scarce as police at 11.40pm said they were still looking for the man while reports claimed he was found inside the bus.His condition was not made known.Stormy weather battered the whole of Cyprus yesterday causing rivers to burst their banks and rendering roads dangerous.The problem was worse in Nicosia where at least one bridge was swept away by the Pedhieos river while police warned residents living near its banks to be on alert throughout the night.Three flights delayed their departure from Paphos airport and an inbound flight was directed to Larnaca due to a hail storm and ice on the runway.The fire service said it responded to over 150 distress calls around the island relating to flooded dwellings and stranded drivers.The island's lowest lowland temperature was felt in Nicosia at 6C, with the highest being in Paphos at 15C.Across the island, the heavy rain was accompanied by strong winds blowing south westerly at force 5-6.In the Troodos Mountains, all four roads to the summit were inaccessible to cars not equipped with four- wheel drive. The road between Platres and Psilodendro was also closed as a result of the storm. Between Limassol and Paphos, roads remained open but with heavy rain and thick fog in the area, police warned drivers to be cautious and to avoid any unnecessary journeys.According to the Larnaca Meterological office, the weather will stay the same today, with showers expected with possible thunderstorms.Sleet and snow will cover the highest peaks of the Troodos Mountains over 5,500 feet, though a significant accumulation of snow is not expected in the next few days. The occasional heavy showers, high wind and low temperatures were not unusual for this time of year, the Larnaca Meteorological office said.
  • [07] Limassol mosque reopens as search begins for an imamBy Sofia KannasTHE KEBIR Mosque in Limassol has opened for the first time since the Turkish invasion in 1974, the Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration in the city confirmed yesterday.The mosque, which has been disused for more than 30 years, was re-opened on Tuesday after the completion of extensive renovation work sponsored by the government.Ayhan Mehmet, representative of the Turkish Cypriot community in Limassol and member of the 'Cyprus belongs to Cypriots' organisation, told the Cyprus Mail the opening of the mosque had coincided with the start of the three-day bayram celebrations.“We were expecting President Glafcos Clerides to come and officially open the mosque but he was unwell, so we went ahead with the opening ceremony. But we have left the ribbon intact so we hope he can come and cut it soon.“The President donated 350 kilos of lamb for our feast, which was shared among 90 families. He also sent us a carpet for the mosque,” he added. Mehmet said the 600 Turkish Cypriots in Limassol were delighted at the reopening of the mosque after so many years.“We are very pleased. It's the first time the Turkish Cypriots have had their own mosque in over 30 years.”All that remains is for an imam to be found for the mosque.“We need an imam, but we want a Turkish Cypriot either from the north or from the United Kingdom. We don't want an Arab or a Turk from the mainland. We are Cypriots and we want some one who really represents us.“We are going to try and get in touch with the UN so that they can maybe help us find a Turkish Cypriot from the north. If not, we have some contacts in the UK.”Mehmet expressed his community's gratitude to President Clerides' government for sponsoring the project, saying: “We thank Mr Clerides and the Republic of Cyprus for helping reopen the mosque.“We are now considering requesting the opening of a Turkish primary school in Limassol. We'd like to reopen one and we hope the government can help again.”Nicos Antoniades, a senior officer at the Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration in Limassol said the renovation project, which began at the beginning of the month, had cost £7,000.“The Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration has spent £7,000 on restoring the Kebir mosque. It has been painted inside and out, toilet facilities have been added, and the balcony leading to the top of the minaret has also been reconstructed.“We are very pleased with the project. The President showed his interest in the scheme and we responded quickly to the request for the mosque's renovation. The Turkish Cypriots are very pleased at the outcome,” he added.
  • [08] Feeling Alive for Eurovision By Tania KhadderCYPRUS has made its choice for Eurovision 2003, with Stelios Constantas set to represent the island with his upbeat pop love song 'Feeling Alive'.Constantas was chosen by a three-member panel made up of composer Lia Vissi, lyricist Evi Proutsa and CyBC official Manios Skordis, who listened through a total of 52 entries. The songs lyrics are entirely in English, which may seem an unlikely representative for Cyprus. “The main reason it's in English is that it is an international competition, and I thought the judges would vote better if they could understand the song,” Constantas told the Cyprus Mail yesterday.The song was not, however, written specifically for the competition. It was a song he was planning to put on his upcoming album, but he finally decided to use it for the Eurovision. The composer has been writing music for 11 years, during which he has worked with famous Greek and Cypriot artists, and released four albums. Born and raised in Cyprus, Constantas has been living in Greece for the last few years, but is now spending some time in Cyprus to relax and prepare for the competition. “It's too early to get too excited, I'm just trying to prepare the song. I will go to Greece to rearrange it because that's where I wrote it.“I believe in it very much, so I hope that it will score well in the contest,” he added.The 2003 Eurovision Song Contest will take place on May 24 in Riga, Latvia.

  • [01] Papadopoulos hits back as investors reveal CSE probeBy Sofia KannasTHE CYPRUS Investors' Association yesterday made public the results of a criminal investigation by the Attorney-general office, implicating presidential candidate Tassos Papadopoulos in a company accused of defrauding investors of millions of pounds.But Papadopoulos' campaign team dismissed the allegations as pre-electoral mud-slinging, saying their candidate had nothing to hide.The contents of the report, which was completed and submitted to the Attorney-general's office on December 16 last year, were revealed at a news conference yesterday.The President of the Investor's Association Demetris Hadjipapas said investigations into Claridge Investments Ltd. had been carried out over a 15-month period, examining suspicions that 12 company members, including board member Papadopoulos, were guilty of defrauding investors.“Shares in the company were deliberately split in order to allow major shareholders the opportunity to sell shares to the public and make financial gains at the investing public's expense,” Hadjipapas said.He added it was “unthinkable” for a presidential candidate to be suspected of committing a series of serious criminal offences connected to the CSE scandal.“How can we continue investigations if he becomes President of the Republic?” he asked.The criminal investigation report itself was damning of the 14 suspects accused of defrauding the public:“We (the criminal investigators) agree with the view of the investors that this is a case of a premeditated trap which led to the defrauding of the investing public as well as developments in the Cyprus stock market.”The Association's Secretary-general Pantelis Nicolaides told the Cyprus Mail the report clearly implied there was a conspiracy on the part of major shareholders and board members.“The case now goes to the Attorney-general, and our question is what are they going to do about the suspects, including Tassos Papadopoulos? It would be strange if he was elected on Sunday facing these charges.”The suspects, 14 in total, have not yet been questioned about the alleged splitting of shares, pending instructions from the Attorney-general.Nicolaides said the Association had sent a letter to Deputy Attorney-general Petros Clerides voicing their concern over the case.“We sent him a letter yesterday but we haven't had a response yet. We will await one.” Clerides yesterday said he was unfamiliar with the report and the investigations carried out.“I am not aware of the case,” he said.Meanwhile, presidential candidate and Attorney- general Alecos Markides defended suggestions that the report should have been made public sooner.“It was impossible to process the findings of the investigation in a few days, especially with the Christmas and New Year holidays. And I was not involved in the legal service after January 4.”Markides also played down Papadopoulos' alleged involvement in the case.“Personally, I never thought this investigation concerned Mr Papadopoulos himself… I knew he was the legal advisor for the company in question but it has not been established that he actually sold shares during the critical period.”Responding to the allegations in a statement yesterday, Papadopoulos' spokesman Marios Karoyian said the announcement by the Association was an example of “pre-election mud slinging.”Karoyian defended the presidential candidate, saying: “Mr Papadopoulos has nothing to fear and nothing to hide… He has answered questions in detail on this subject and has made it clear that he has not sold any Claridge shares.”But the Chairman of the House Watchdog Committee, Christos Pourgourides, suggested that it didn't matter whether Papadopoulos sold shares or not.“If Mr Papadopoullos has or hasn't sold any shares personally has no relevance whatsoever. “Friends and associates on the Board and companies of friends and relatives of his wife have sold shares and have allegedly defrauded the public,” he said in a statement.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [02] Third plan only with give and takeBy George PsyllidesTHE GOVERNMENT said yesterday a third version of the United Nations settlement plan for Cyprus would only be submitted if there was a give and take procedure during ongoing talks between the two sides.Government Spokesman Michalis Papapetrou said the government agreed with Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou's assertion that an effort for give and take had to precede a third revised plan.Papapetrou suggested that in the absence of such a procedure, any changes to the current plan would be insignificant, since no one could unilaterally change anything to make it favourable for either side.The Government Spokesman repeated that he could not confirm whether UN Secretary-general Kofi Annan would be visiting the island at the end of the month, adding that despite the information, there was no official notice concerning the matter.On Tuesday, Greek Government Spokesman Christos Protopapas said Annan would visit Cyprus at the end of this month, following visits to Turkey and Greece.“We have information; we don't have any official notice,” Papapetrou said.He added that the government would take the issue up with UN special envoy Alvaro de Soto when he returned today or tomorrow.Commenting on Attorney-general Alecos Markides' suggestion that a third plan would be in a take-it-or-leave-it form, Papapetrou said Markides was voicing his own opinion.He said President Glafcos Clerides had a different view on the matter and, through public comments, the President wanted to send certain messages.Regarding the talks between Greece and Turkey on security issues in Cyprus, Papapetrou said it was important that Turkey, which had refused to talk on several occasions in the past, was now willing to discuss the matter.Papapetrou said the government was in “full and close contact” with the Greek government and there was “common planning, common positions and common understanding” on how the issue should be handled.The UN has called on the NATO allies to press ahead with ironing out any security aspects of the blueprint before the UN's February 28 deadline.“The negotiations, according to our suggestion, should start as soon as possible, next week,” Greek Foreign Ministry Spokesman Panos Beglitis said in Athens yesterday.Beglitis told a news briefing that Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou had sent a letter to his Turkish counterpart Yassar Yakis inviting Turkey to start talks on Cyprus-related security issues.He said Greece suggested high- ranking foreign ministry officials and military experts from both sides should take part in the talks that would be held in Athens and Ankara alternately.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [03] Leaders lashed for media interventionsBy a Staff ReporterPRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Tassos Papadopoulos and the leader of AKEL Demetris Christofias, were both on the receiving end of a barrage of condemnation yesterday for intervening in the work of journalists and hindering the freedom of speech.Christofias, whose party is backing Papadopoulos' ticket, on Tuesday interrupted a live prime-time radio show on state-controlled CyBC to reprimand the presenter for not doing her job properly because, as he claimed, she was asking the foreign minister 'loaded' questions.On the same day Papadopoulos threatened a television station he would pull out of a live interview if a specific journalist were not taken off the panel.At the same time Papadopoulos' staff issued an announcement accusing a second journalist, who had taken part in a television interview on Monday, of launching a “defamatory attack” against their candidate.During the interview the journalist pointed out to Papadopoulos that his education policy document contained numerous spelling and syntax mistakes and wondered whether they were going to be employed at the education ministry if he were elected president.Papadopoulos' staff conceded there were four or five typos, which they said was normal.In a counter statement the journalist maintained that he was ready to indicate many more grammatical errors than just four or five.Yesterday, AKEL's mouthpiece Haravghi, launched a scathing attack against the journalist, charging that he was under the orders of the presidential palace and DISY chief Nicos Anastassiades.Government spokesman Michalis Papapetrou urged Papadopoulos and his supporters not to let the election carry them away into practices and mentalities of the past.“I express my sadness and disappointment because yesterday's (Tuesday's) incident, where Christofias exerted pressure on a CyBC reporter, was not an isolated one.“In three instances, attempts were made to put pressure on journalists - and these are only those which saw the public light,” Papapetrou said.The spokesman said it was unacceptable to use pressure to decide who would interview candidates, noting that he could have filed many libel suits against specific newspapers but he chose not to because a politician should be tolerant of such practises.The journalists union yesterday censured both leaders' actions, stressing that journalists rejected any attempts made to intervene, influence, pressure, blackmail, threaten or gag the media. The union expressed its worry and displeasure at the interventions from politicians and other circles in the work of journalists.Attorney-general Alecos Markides condemned the phenomenon and described it as a “worrying sign of the mentality of those supposedly supporting change”.“Such practices are not only directed against journalists but are especially aimed at a every person's freedom of speech and expression,” Markides said.He added: “Is this the change Mr Papadopoulos and the parties which support him want to bring to the country?”DISY spokesman Tasos Mitsopoulos said these “phenomena were indicative of an authoritarian and dated mentality, which take us back to politicians of other eras”.“It is with sadness that we see a presidential candidate wanting to impose the journalists of his liking and decide who would be opposite him every time,” Mitsopoulos said.Commenting on his demand to remove a journalist from the panel, Papadopoulos said he had the right to protect himself and the matter had nothing to do with the freedom of speech. He said the newspaper the particular journalist worked for wrote abusive articles with twisted facts aiming to hurt him.Concerning the mistakes in his education programme, Papadopoulos said his staff simply wrote a letter indicating that his 14- page pamphlet contained four typos and one syntax error.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [04] Cyprus to keep abreast of EU implant guidelinesBy Stefanos EvripidouTHE EUROPEAN Parliament is drafting a resolution setting down strict rules and guidelines on breast implant surgery, including the introduction of national registers and passports. If acted upon, these rules will be adopted in Cyprus where chest-enhancing operations have hit the thousands - for both sexes. Plastic surgeon Dr Alecos Kammitsis was the first person to introduce breast implants to Cyprus in 1975. He told the Cyprus Mail that since then, thousands of people had had breasts implants, adding that ninety-nine per cent were for cosmetic purposes. The draft report on Community and national measures in relation to breast implants was compiled by the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Consumer Policy. It sets out measures to ensure patients are provided with adequate information, correct procedures and appropriate products for breast implant surgery, while calling for better information on quality control and research.Doctors will be obliged to provide full and reliable information on the procedures and initiate a clear, informed discussion of the implications of breast implant surgery. The report calls on national authorities to establish a register system to enable both producers and patients to be traced. Counselling after the operation and check-ups at least once a year are also advocated by the committee. Advertising needs to be regulated to avoid inflating demand for implants among men and women without providing balanced information. The paper also requests that advertising for "cosmetic surgery" should carry clear bold health warnings. The focus should be an acceptance of persons as they are, “rather than allowing unregulated advertising practices to impose an ideal conception of beauty as the norm”.Implant recipients will hold a passport under committee recommendations, in which details of the implant and aftercare measures are indicated, while the passport will act as proof of consent for the operation.Kammitsis maintains that the content used in breast implants is continually improving. “The main problem arises with the technique used rather than the content. It is the outer part of the implant which has been known to leak, not the inner content,” he said.“But implants have improved a lot and I have never come across any problems in my experience,” said Kammitsis. Currently, there are no standards on implants in Cyprus. “We are waiting for the EU to complete their studies and recommendations and then we will adopt them ourselves,” he said. “Basically, they are asking doctors fully to inform the patient what is to be done and make sure they understand.”Kammitsis said that the majority of people enlarging their breasts were young women between 20 and 40 years of age. The number of men asking for the operation was in the hundreds, he added. “Personally I have performed 40 operations on men,” he said.“There are minor risks to the operation but a lot depends on the technique used by the doctor. Their life-span is not fixed. As long as they are doing alright, they don't need replacing. One of my patients has had hers for 27 years,” he added.However, to avoid loosening the breast, post-natal women are warned not to breast feed if they want to maintain the aesthetic effect.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [05] Tests show lead poisoning killed flamingosBy Alex MitaTHE VETERINARY Services said yesterday they believed the recent death of 20 flamingos at the Larnaca salt lake was caused by lead poisoning.The head of the veterinary services Klitos Andreou told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that scientists who carried out post mortem examinations on the dead birds had found large quantities of lead pellets fired at a clay pigeon range close to the lake.“We believe the birds swallowed pellets fired from the range,” he said adding it would only take a small amount of lead to poison the birds. “These birds feed on shrimps from the bottom of the lake and at night they congregate at the centre of the lake,” Andreou said.“Their beaks are specially designed to sieve the mud and water from the lake bed leaving only the shrimp and plankton in their beaks which they swallow. But because the pellets are small they stay in the beak and are swallowed -- and lead is a really toxic metal.” “The symptoms we have seen so far lead to the assumption that lead poisoning is the cause of death.”But Andreou cautioned the Veterinary Services' findings were based only on preliminary examinations.“We have sent mud and water samples for toxicological and forensic examination and I am sure the results will shed more light into the issue,” Andreou said. House Environment Committee president George Lillikas of AKEL told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that if it was lead poisoning that had killed the flamingos then the entire salt lake would have to be thoroughly cleaned.“It is still unclear whether the death of the birds was caused by lead poisoning, but if that is the case, the entire salt lake should be emptied and cleaned to prevent more deaths, something that would cost a lot of money,” Lillikas said, pledging to have the shooting range removed from the area.“We will bring the matter up when the House reopens after the elections and we will do everything within our power to see whether we can have the clay pigeon range removed or have the shooters fire in another direction so the pellets don't fall into the salt lake,” Lillikas said. Green Party deputy George Perdikis said yesterday it was high time the shooting range as well as other issues around the salt lake were addressed by the government in order to safeguard the future of the birds.“That shooting range is illegal,” he claimed.“We have been saying this all the time but I will say it again, the government does not care. They don't care about the sewage pipe that will be built around the lake and they don't care that the airport has taken over some of the area designated for the wetlands.”Perdikis said the greens had taken their own samples and sent them for examination.“We cannot at this time be certain that the death of the flamingos was caused by the lead pellets,” he said.“However, we will wait for the results of our examination and then we will act. If the cause of the problem is the shooting range then I can't wait until we have enough money to buy a bulldozer and tear the whole place down.”

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [06] One missing as bad weather floods rivers and blocks roadsBy Tania KhadderA 60-YEAR-OLD bus driver was missing last night after his vehicle was swept away by a river which broke its banks due to the heavy rains, police said.The man had just dropped off his passengers - mainly pupils - at around 7pm, when his mini-bus was swept by the Yialias river in Pera Horio Nisou near Nicosia.Information on the situation was scarce as police at 11.40pm said they were still looking for the man while reports claimed he was found inside the bus.His condition was not made known.Stormy weather battered the whole of Cyprus yesterday causing rivers to burst their banks and rendering roads dangerous.The problem was worse in Nicosia where at least one bridge was swept away by the Pedhieos river while police warned residents living near its banks to be on alert throughout the night.Three flights delayed their departure from Paphos airport and an inbound flight was directed to Larnaca due to a hail storm and ice on the runway.The fire service said it responded to over 150 distress calls around the island relating to flooded dwellings and stranded drivers.The island's lowest lowland temperature was felt in Nicosia at 6C, with the highest being in Paphos at 15C.Across the island, the heavy rain was accompanied by strong winds blowing south westerly at force 5-6.In the Troodos Mountains, all four roads to the summit were inaccessible to cars not equipped with four- wheel drive. The road between Platres and Psilodendro was also closed as a result of the storm. Between Limassol and Paphos, roads remained open but with heavy rain and thick fog in the area, police warned drivers to be cautious and to avoid any unnecessary journeys.According to the Larnaca Meterological office, the weather will stay the same today, with showers expected with possible thunderstorms.Sleet and snow will cover the highest peaks of the Troodos Mountains over 5,500 feet, though a significant accumulation of snow is not expected in the next few days. The occasional heavy showers, high wind and low temperatures were not unusual for this time of year, the Larnaca Meteorological office said.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [07] Limassol mosque reopens as search begins for an imamBy Sofia KannasTHE KEBIR Mosque in Limassol has opened for the first time since the Turkish invasion in 1974, the Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration in the city confirmed yesterday.The mosque, which has been disused for more than 30 years, was re-opened on Tuesday after the completion of extensive renovation work sponsored by the government.Ayhan Mehmet, representative of the Turkish Cypriot community in Limassol and member of the 'Cyprus belongs to Cypriots' organisation, told the Cyprus Mail the opening of the mosque had coincided with the start of the three-day bayram celebrations.“We were expecting President Glafcos Clerides to come and officially open the mosque but he was unwell, so we went ahead with the opening ceremony. But we have left the ribbon intact so we hope he can come and cut it soon.“The President donated 350 kilos of lamb for our feast, which was shared among 90 families. He also sent us a carpet for the mosque,” he added. Mehmet said the 600 Turkish Cypriots in Limassol were delighted at the reopening of the mosque after so many years.“We are very pleased. It's the first time the Turkish Cypriots have had their own mosque in over 30 years.”All that remains is for an imam to be found for the mosque.“We need an imam, but we want a Turkish Cypriot either from the north or from the United Kingdom. We don't want an Arab or a Turk from the mainland. We are Cypriots and we want some one who really represents us.“We are going to try and get in touch with the UN so that they can maybe help us find a Turkish Cypriot from the north. If not, we have some contacts in the UK.”Mehmet expressed his community's gratitude to President Clerides' government for sponsoring the project, saying: “We thank Mr Clerides and the Republic of Cyprus for helping reopen the mosque.“We are now considering requesting the opening of a Turkish primary school in Limassol. We'd like to reopen one and we hope the government can help again.”Nicos Antoniades, a senior officer at the Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration in Limassol said the renovation project, which began at the beginning of the month, had cost £7,000.“The Turkish Cypriot Properties Administration has spent £7,000 on restoring the Kebir mosque. It has been painted inside and out, toilet facilities have been added, and the balcony leading to the top of the minaret has also been reconstructed.“We are very pleased with the project. The President showed his interest in the scheme and we responded quickly to the request for the mosque's renovation. The Turkish Cypriots are very pleased at the outcome,” he added.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003

    Thursday, February 13, 2003

    [08] Feeling Alive for Eurovision By Tania KhadderCYPRUS has made its choice for Eurovision 2003, with Stelios Constantas set to represent the island with his upbeat pop love song 'Feeling Alive'.Constantas was chosen by a three-member panel made up of composer Lia Vissi, lyricist Evi Proutsa and CyBC official Manios Skordis, who listened through a total of 52 entries. The songs lyrics are entirely in English, which may seem an unlikely representative for Cyprus. “The main reason it's in English is that it is an international competition, and I thought the judges would vote better if they could understand the song,” Constantas told the Cyprus Mail yesterday.The song was not, however, written specifically for the competition. It was a song he was planning to put on his upcoming album, but he finally decided to use it for the Eurovision. The composer has been writing music for 11 years, during which he has worked with famous Greek and Cypriot artists, and released four albums. Born and raised in Cyprus, Constantas has been living in Greece for the last few years, but is now spending some time in Cyprus to relax and prepare for the competition. “It's too early to get too excited, I'm just trying to prepare the song. I will go to Greece to rearrange it because that's where I wrote it.“I believe in it very much, so I hope that it will score well in the contest,” he added.The 2003 Eurovision Song Contest will take place on May 24 in Riga, Latvia.

    Copyright Cyprus Mail 2003


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