Domestic wine sector looks to exports
NEWS IN DETAIL
Low turnout to second round of farmers' protests
In the presence of a heavy police cordon, farmers began a second round of
protests in Karditsa today with a lower turnout than expected. The low-key
atmosphere is also due to the postponement of a trial of farmers for their
participation in previous demonstrations.
A rally scheduled to take place in the town's main square is to go ahead.
Tractors expected to gather there had not yet made their appearance,
although some have begun to move in to the prefecture's village squares.
Five detachments of the riot squad arrived in Thessaly yesterday as part of
a joint plan by the Public Order Ministry and the Greek police (ELAS) to
deal with the demonstrations.
In a related development, farmers in the region of Thessaloniki appeared to
be divided over whether to participate in tomorrow's protest rally.
The Federation of Agricultural Associations of Thessaloniki today called on
its members not to take part in the rally, describing such types of protest
as ''inappropriate'', particularly ''at a time when the competent minister
has committed himself to examining all the issues of concern to farmers''.
In an announcement, the federation points out that the rally cannot be
legitimized because the farmers' coordinating committee is not an
officially recognized body.
According to a coordinating committee decision, farmers from Thessaloniki
and surrounding prefectures will be asked to gather for the rally after
noon tomorrow at the entrance of the Thessaloniki International Fair
installations.
A delegation will seek a meeting with Tzoumakas who will visit the
installations at 7 pm local time to inaugurate the Agrotica exhibition.
Originally, the farmers had planned to block the entrance to the installations
in order to prevent the inauguration ceremony, but coordinating committee
member Yiannis Vogiatzis told the ANA today that there would be no blockade,
only a protest rally.
The rally was also condemned today by the Association of Exporters of
Northern Greece (SEBE) who called it ''untimely and out of place''.
According to SEBE, the new round of farmers' protests would create
''serious problems for the functioning of the state, the collapse of the
fragile national economy and, as a consequence, the ruin of export
undertakings''.
No progress in talks with striking teachers
Representatives of striking teachers said after talks with Education
Minister Gerasimos Arsenis that they would continue their labour action
because their main demand -- a monthly pay increase of 70,000 drachmas --
had not been satisfied.
Arsenis held talks at the ministry with representatives of the teachers'
union (OLME) late last night until 3 am local time. During the talks,
dozens of teachers gathered outside the building chanting slogans and
holding banners.
During the meeting last night, attended also by Finance Undersecretary
Nikos Christodoulakis, the government proposed an increase of 15,000
drachmas in the allowance given to teachers for work outside school hours
which currently stands at 35,000 drachmas.
It also proposed that the lump sum payment of 90,000 drachmas owed since
last December should be given to teachers.
Arsenis said the government had exhausted all possible margins for
satisfying the teachers' demands and called for a continuation of dialogue
to resolve the problems in the sector of education.
Simitis, Papantoniou meet on economy's course
Prime Minister Costas Simitis and National Economy Minister Yiannos
Papantoniou met today to discuss the entire range of issues concerning the
government's economic policy.
After the 70-minute meeting, Papantoniou told reporters that the meeting
had focused on the economy in general and the major infrastructure works in
particular.
They also discussed the absorption of European Union funds and the
implementation of the budget.
Replying to questions, Papantoniou described as ''satisfactory'' the course
of the economy, stressing that the government was determined to stick to
its policy.
He gave the assurance that the economy would not be adversely affected by a
fresh round of protest action which farmers began yesterday.
George Papandreou, Constantine Mitsotakis receive Ipekci awards
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou, former premier Constantine
Mitsotakis and Coalition of the Left and Progress Eurodeputy Michalis
Papayiannakis will be awarded ''Ipekci Peace and Friendship'' prizes at a
special ceremony to be held in Istanbul in May.
An announcement by the Greek section of the awards organisation said today
that the three politicians had worked for Greek-Turkish rapprochement,
friendship and cooperation.
The bi-annual Ipekci Awards, alternately hosted in Athens and Istanbul,
were established following a Greek initiative in February 1979, shortly
after the assassination of Abdi Ipekci, an editor who worked for the
Turkish daily ''Milliyet''.
The awards are given in recognition of efforts to promote Greek-Turkish
friendship and cooperation.
Mitsotakis will be given the organisation's main ''Peace and Friendship''
award for ''his efforts during the past 20 years to promote Greek-Turkish
rapprochement and his support for the ''moslem'' minority of Western
Thrace.
Special prizes will be awarded to Papandreou and Papayiannakis. To the
former for his work as education minister in the previous PASOK government
and to the latter for the ''cool-headed, objective and conciliatory way in
which he deals with Greek-Turkish relations,'' the announcement of the
Greek section said.
Court bomb defused
Athens' Evelpidon court house was evacuated this morning after a warning
was telephoned in to the newspaper Eleftherotypia and SKAI radio station
that a bomb had been planted in building six. It was later found and
defused.
Yesterday a caller claiming to represent the previously unknown "National
Liberation Struggle" called two radio stations saying an explosive device
had been planted in the courts but after a fruitless search it was regarded
as a hoax.
A forensic examination of the bomb revealed that it was similar to the type
used by two terrorist groups -- the Revolutionary Popular Struggle (ELA)
and May 1 -- when they first appeared in 1991.
The device consisted of a clock and two kilos of powerful explosive. Police
said it would have flattened the court building if it had gone off.
Set to explode at 8 pm last night, the device failed to go off for reasons
as yet unknown. The police are now investigating whether last night's
search was conducted with due diligence.
Respect of UN resolutions before any initiative on Cyprus problem
The Cyprus problem remains an international issue and Greece favours
initiatives for its resolution, on the condition they respect UN resolutions
and the basic principles currently applied in the international community,
Foreign Minister Theodoros Panagalos said yesterday.
"The basic framework for the Cyprus problem is the UN. Greece does not
disapprove of any international initiative, wherever it may come from," he
told reporters after the first-ever discussion of foreign policy issues by
a PASOK executive bureau session .
"There was general agreement that the issue remains an international one,"
he added.
"Greece includes Cyprus in its total national planning. Nothing that
concerns Cyprus is alien to Greece," he stressed.
Regarding a US-proposed moratorium of military flights over Cyprus, the
foreign minister said the issue was not discussed at the session, but was a
tactical matter and was being considered by the competent ministries.
"We have a full identity of views between the defence and foreign
ministries, and of course, the Cypriot leadership is also in agreement," he
said, adding that he disliked the term "moratorium", preferring "suspension
of (military) flights" over Cyprus.
Meeting in Larissa to focus on PfP exercise in Ukraine
A multi-national exercise code-named "Cooperative Neighbour '97" will be
held in Lviv, Ukraine, from July 1-14 within the framework of the
Partnership for Peace (PfP) programme.
The purpose of the exercise is to develop cooperation between NATO member-
states and the countries included in the programme.
As of today and until Jan. 30, meetings will be held at the headquarters of
the 1st Army Corps in Larisa on the planning of the exercise,, with the
participation of representatives from the US, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Georgia,
Estonia, Moldova, the Former Yu goslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), the
Czech Republic, Romania and Slovakia as well as officers from the NATO
headquarters in Brussels and in Naples.
The exercise is being planned by the commander of NATO's southern wing, and
will be coordinated and directed by the commander of the 1st Army
Corps.
Greece expresses objecctions to EU funding for FYROM
National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos Papantoniou yesterday
expressed Greece's objections to European Union macro-economic aid toward
the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), during a meeting of the
Council of ECOFIN Ministers.
Speaking to reporters afterwards, Mr. Papantoniou said Athens' reservations
concern both the technical aspects of the issue as well as the political
issues, since "the development of economic relations between the EU and
FYROM is unavoidably linked to the political relationship between Greece
and FYROM."
Athens also said an explanation is necessary concerning the issue of paying
off previous debts owed to the EU by FYROM (US$34 million), before any
decision is taken on granting a new loan.
The loan FYROM is seeking from the EU is in the range of about US$50
million.
China flatly denies missile deal with Turkey
There is no "secret agreement between China and Turkey for the construction
of ground-to-ground missiles, Vice-President and Foreign Minister Chian
Chiseng said in Beijing yesterday.
Mr. Chian made the statement during a meeting with the members of a
visiting Greek delegation headed by former PASOK minister Karolos
Papoulias.
According to a Turkish press report earlier this month, Turkey and China
have signed an agreement for construction of Chinese-made WS-1 missiles.
Papandreou calls for cuts in EU staff in Brussels
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou has called on competent
ministers to "gradually decrease as much as possible the number of ministry
staff serving at Greece's permanent representation to the European Union,
in what he termed as "an effort to rationalise the size of the representation."
Mr. Papandreou sent the letter to the ministers of national economy and
finance, interior, development, environment, town planning and public works,
labour, culture, merchant marine, public order and transport.
Domestic wine sector looks to exports
Wine consumption in Greece has declined sharply during the past 15 years,
although a steady increase of 5 per cent annually is expected over the next
five years, according to a branch report published today by the Institute
of Economic and Industrial Studies (IOBE).
In view of the figures, IOBE said, exports had become a ''one-way street''
for wine producers.
Per capita consumption of wine in Greece is 30 litres annually, one of the
highest figures worldwide but lower than the European Union average of 37
litres and about half the corresponding consumption in other Mediterranean
countries of Europe such as Italy and France.
IOBE noted a gradual turn towards the so-called ''quality'' wines of small
producers.
White wine accounts for 75 per cent of total domestic consumption, red 15
per cent and rose 10 per cent.
Wine consumption in general accounts for 20 per cent of total consumption
of alcoholic drinks in Greece, compared to 34 per cent in 1982. Due to its
comparatively low price, house wine remains the favourite of Greeks,
accounting for 60 per cent of consumption, compared to 40 per cent for
bottled wine.
With exports about 10 times the volume of imports, the wine trade with
foreign countries showed an 11.5 billion drachma surplus in 1994. Two
countries -- Germany and France -- absorb 68 per cent of Greek wine
exports.
Roughly 18 per cent of Greece's wine production is exported, although these
exports account for just 1.5-2 per cent of total EU exports. In 1994, the
value of Greek wine exports amounted to 15.1 billion drachmas.
Foreign imported wines account for only 2 per cent of domestic consumption.
Of these wines, the majority originate from Italy (36 per cent) and France
(21 per cent).
WEATHER
Fair to partly cloudy in most parts of Greece, with winds moderate to
strong gradually subsiding. Eastern and southern Greece will be partly
cloudy. Athens will be mostly sunny with temperatures ranging from 2-11C.
Same in Thessaloniki with temperatures between -2 and 5C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Closing rates - buying US dlr. 254.269
Pound sterling 412.950 Cyprus pd 518.816
French franc 46.063 Swiss franc 179.636
German mark 155.308 Italian lira (100) 15.946
Yen (100) 213.101 Canadian dlr. 189.155
Australian dlr. 196.406 Irish Punt 407.216
Belgian franc 7.533 Finnish mark 52.489
Dutch guilder 138.265 Danish kr. 40.739
Swedish kr. 35.077 Norwegian kr. 39.134
Austrian sh. 22.082 Spanish peseta 1.846
Portuguese escudo 1.554
(M.P.)