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Athens News Agency: News in English, 97-01-23

Athens News Agency: News in English Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Athens News Agency at <http://www.forthnet.gr/ape>


NEWS IN ENGLISH

ATHENS, GREECE, 23/01/1997 (ANA)

MAIN HEADLINES

  • Seamen end strike as workers launch 24-hour stoppage
  • Romanian Foreign Minister in Athens today
  • Berisha visit to Greece in March confirmed
  • Drachma slide eases against foreign currencies in 1996
  • Athens metro ready by 2000
  • Prospects for Athens bourse outlined
  • Tourist arrivals expected to rebound in '97

    NEWS IN DETAIL

    Seamen end strike as workers begin a 24-hour stoppage

    Greek seamen and dock workers today ended a 10-day strike after intensive all-night negotiations between the government and the Panhellenic Seamen's Federation. Sailings to the Greek islands resumed normally, a Merchant Marine spokesman said.

    The stoppage, which paralysed transport and caused hardships to the Greek islands, involved all ships with Greek crews and kept vessels moored at port stranding thousands of angry passengers and hundreds of local and foreign lorries in Greek and Italian ports.

    A federation spokesman said their union has accepted "improved government proposals submitted to them by a committee headed by Merchant Marine Minister Stavros Soumakis."

    The seamen's main demands was preservation of a special tax status for them since 1955 which the government changed in its tax legislation.

    But as the seamen ended their stoppage, Greece's labour unions began a 24- hour strike called by the Confederation of Greek workers (GSEE) protesting the government's taxation policies.

    The walkout is expected to affect the country's private and public sectors, including banks, with widespread disruptions in transportation services.

    The main demands put by GSEE are the index-linking of tax brackets to inflation and the increase - to 2 million drachmas - of tax-free income.

    Romanian FM in Athens today

    Romanian Foreign Minister Adrian Severin will be in Athens today to meet with his Greek counterpart, Theodoros Pangalos.

    Bilateral relations and the situation in the Balkans will be discussed.

    Greece to assume command of S-FOR unit containing Greek contingent

    Greece will assume command of a unit which includes its contingent in NATO's Stabilization Force (S-FOR) in Bosnia at the beginning of March, sources said yesterday.

    This will take place after the withdrawal of the Belgian contingent which heads the unit now. The unit also comprises contingents from Austria and Luxembourg.

    The Greek contingent will be further strengthened, the same sources added.

    Gen. Tzoganis to visit Albania next month

    The Chief of the National Defence General Staff Gen. Athanasios Tzoganis will visit Albania next month for talks expected to lead to a broadening of an existing Greek-Albanian military accord, defence ministry sources said yesterday.

    Meanwhile, the same sources said that the all-service map exercise code- named "Alexandros" will be held in early February, and last seven days. The sources added that Greece and Israel might hold joint military exercises during the year following a grad ual strengthening in relations between the armed forces of the two countries.

    FM employees on strike today

    Foreign ministry employees will go on strike today to protest a government- planned abolition of a special bonus for staff working in Greek embassies and consulates abroad. Members of the Diplomatic Employees Union will not participate in the strike.

    New improved cigarette filter to be introduced on Feb. 1

    Three Athens-based researchers yesterday formally presented a "revolutionary" cigarette filter they claim will make smoking less harmful for hundreds of millions of smokers around the world.

    The three university professors unveiled their discovery to Greek and foreign newsmen at a press conference organised by the Greek Cooperative Tobacco Industry (SEKAP), the first cigarette producer in the world to introduce the "bio-filter" in its brands - expected for release on Feb. 1.

    The researchers had announced details of their discovery at an international symposium last week.

    The "bio-filter" resembles conventional cigarette filters in appearance, but its reportedly more innovative design screens out short-lived carcinogens that ordinary filters do not.

    Berisha visit to Athens in March confirmed

    Greece's newly appointed Ambassador to Albania, Constantine Prevedourakis, told reporters yesterday that Greece "is the best advocate of Albania's approach to Europe," and confirmed news of a forthcoming visit by Albanian P resident Sali Berisha to Greece.

    According to Mr. Prevedourakis, Mr. Berisha is due to visit Greece in March. His visit follows President Kostis Stephanopoulos' visit to Albania last March.

    Noting that Athens wished that Mr. Berisha could visit Greece at an earlier date, Mr. Prevedourakis said the Albanian president's visit to Greece "is serious, and a serious outcome is expected of it."

    He noted that Prime Minister Costas Simitis will also visit Tirana.

    Reiterating that Greek-Albanian relations were undergoing "a period of grace," Mr. Prevedourakis also stressed the need to reinforce relations between the two countries.

    EU considers compensation for slaughtered livestock excessive

    Greece may be called upon to return hundreds of millions of drachmas to the European Union, as the Union reportedly considers compensation to Thrace region farmers whose livestock were slaughtered following outbreaks of cowpox and foot-and-mouth disease a s too high.

    The EU may also implement sanctions on individuals who assessed the damage and seek a continuation of the "quarantine."

    Thousands of livestock animals have been slaughtered in the prefectures of Kavala, Xanthi, Rhodopi, and Evros.

    Drachma slide eases against foreign currencies in 1996

    The drachma depreciated in 1996 against all foreign currencies by 0.04 per cent and against European currencies by 0.36 per cent, according to the monthly bulletin of weighted parity indices compiled by the Exports Research and Studies Centre (KEEM).

    The corresponding depreciation figures for 1994 were 5.0 per cent and 5.6 per cent respectively, while in 1995, 3.36 per cent and 4.35 per cent.

    According to KEEM, the drachma depreciated against all EU member-state currencies in December 1996 compared to the previous month.

    The extent of the drachma's loss in value ranged between 0.02 (Swedish krona) and 3.5 per cent (pound sterling).

    Athens Metro ready by 2000, if problems are timely solved

    Representatives of the Olympic consortium, which is overseeing the construction of Athens' underground metro, yesterday stressed that the project will be ready before 2000, if delays stemming from recent archaeological finds in the Metropolitan Cathedral and Keramikos areas are quickly solved.

    The metro officials also said that any differences between the Greek government and the consortium will be dealt with within the framework of the existing agreement.

    According to the representatives, prior to determining additional costs, technical solutions must be found to these problems. They added that they believe the added costs will be equally shared by the consortium and the state.

    Xenia '97 opens

    Merchant Marine Minister Stavros Soumakis yesterday evening opened the "Xenia '97" tourism trade exhibition, noting that the event has contributed to better promotion of Greece's tourism sector.

    Mr. Soumakis said his ministry contributed actively in the nation's tourism development through efforts to upgrade ports around the country.

    Xenia '97 is held under the auspices of the development ministry and the Greek Tourism Organisation.

    Prospects for Athens bourse outlined

    Prospects for the Athens Stock Exchange (ASE) was the focus of a speech by Alexis Pilavios, chairman of the Association of Institutional Investors and Managing Director of "Alpha Investments" at a meeting in Athens yesterday, sponsored by Delos Communicat ions.

    Some of the problems still facing the ASE, he said, included a lack of specialised, experienced personnel on the administrative committee,as well as delays in distributing information on companies' financial status. In addition, the fact that there are a large number of companies (230) with small numbers of shares has resulted in a lower liquidation of shares, which translates into a large gap between buying and selling prices. This, he added, was not representative of the existing supply and demand.

    Moreover, the market had been given a bad name by the considerable speculation resulting from the small number of liquidations, combined with the existence of unjustified fluctuations of trading of shares (plus or minus 8 per cent).

    However, with a larger number of specialist personnel joining its management, along with the distribution of quarterly financial reports to begin in fall 1997, Mr. Pilavios felt the ASE's prospects would improve.

    "With an improvement of the infrastructure of the (ASE), higher liquidity and lower interest rates, a new market will emerge which will attract growth companies," he predicted, noting the importance of the entrance of shipping and insurance companies to the future of the bourse.

    In the long-term, Mr. Pilavios believes that after the introduction of the Euro, larger European companies will be attracted to the idea of a unified European stock market, with smaller companies joining regional stock exchanges with limited investments .

    "The Greek stock exchange seems secure as long as the Greek economy is able to catch up with the rest of the economies of other European Union members, " he concluded.

    Ouzo producer sold to French multi-national

    The sale of the Lesvos-based Epom company, which produces the ouzo brands Mini, Lesvos and Fimi, to the multi-national Pernod-Ricard group was officially announced on the eastern Aegean island yesterday.

    "The administrations of the Pernod-Ricard group and the Epom company announce that a cooperation agreement has been concluded in principle and in the framework of which the Pernod-Ricard group, through its subsidiary SEGM, will participate in the share capital of Epom, and at the same time it will proceed through its international distribution network to develop the company's ouzo products, and in particular, the ouzo Mini..." an announcement read.

    The announcement further said that the only obstacle remaining to finalise the deal is its approval by the development ministry's competition committee.

    The company's pricetag, according to reports, was approximately five billion drachmas, while the entire deal was concluded only two days ago when representatives of the French multinational company visited installations in Mytilene.

    Tourist arrivals expected to rebound in '97

    The second quarterly report of the newly established Institute of Tourist Research and Forecasts (ITEP) forecasts a significant recovery in Greece's tourism sector this year.

    On the basis of conservative estimates, ITEP, which belongs to the Hoteliers' Chamber of Greece and is headed by Athens University professor Panayiotis Pavlopoulos, says the increase in tourist arrivals will be in the order of 8 to 10 per cent in relati on to 1996.

    If realised, it is estimated that the corresponding increase in foreign exchange receipts will amount to US$500 million, with a 1 per cent increase in national income - about one-third of the expected GDP increase.

    It is also projected that tourists from the emerging markets of central and eastern Europe will especially contribute to the increase, while the lifting of the embargo on the former Yugoslavia alone could result in a 5 per cent (roughly 500,000) rise in arrivals.

    WEATHER

    Fair weather is forecast for most of Greece today with some clouds in central and eastern Greece, Thessaly, northern Crete and eastern parts of the Peloponnese. Athens will be sunny to partly cloudy and temperatures between 7-12C. Same for Thessaloniki with temperatures between 1-9C.

    FOREIGN EXCHANGE

    (closing rates - buying) US dlr. 254.636 Pound sterling 421.580 Cyprus pd 518.816 French franc 45.943 Swiss franc 177.563 German mark 154.901 Italian lira (100) 15.964 Yen (100) 213.885 Canadian dlr. 190.028 Australian dlr. 196.857 Irish Punt 410.688 Belgian franc 7.514 Finnish mark 53.014 Dutch guilder 137.967 Danish kr. 40.672 Swedish kr. 35.627 Norwegian kr. 38.946 Austrian sh. 22.064 Spanish peseta 1.865 Portuguese escudo 1.559

    (C.E.)


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