Official burial planned for Greeks who fell in Albania
NEWS IN DETAIL
Museums, sites remain closed
Culture ministry employees will hold a rally in Athens tomorrow morning to
protest the ministry's application to a court to have their strike declared
''illegal and abusive''.
The rally will be held outside the ministry building at 10.00 local time to
protest the application which has been filed by the ministry under the
provisional remedies procedure.
The application will be discussed by an Athens court at noon tomorrow.
According to the strikers, Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos has not
accepted to meet them to discuss the reasons for their ongoing 48-hour
rolling strikes.
The country's most visited archaeological sites and museums remained closed
today because of the strike, including the Acropolis, the Archaeological
Museum and the Byzantine Museum in Athens and the White Tower and
Archaeological Museum in the northern port city of Thessaloniki.
EU Commissioner begins visit
European Commissioner for regional policy and the cohesion fund Monika Wulf-
Mathies begins an official visit to Athens today. Her talks will include a
meeting with Prime Minister Costas Simitis.
Tomorrow, Wulf-Mathies is to present the Commission's first report on
economic and social cohesion in the European Union, at an event at Athens'
Grande Bretagne Hotel. National Economy Minister Yannos Papantoniou and
Undersecretary Christos Pachtas will address the same event on Greece's
positions.
On Thursday, the Commissioner is to visit major public works in Crete and
on Friday, after visiting projects in Athens, she will give a press
conference.
Clerides to visit Athens Thursday
Cyprus President Glafcos Clerides will arrive in Athens on Thursday for a
two-day visit during which he will attend an event on the ongoing Cyprus
problem to be held at the War Museum.
The event, to be held on Thursday under the general title ''1997: The Year
of Cyprus - The Cyprus problem as touchstone in Greek-Turkish relations'',
has been organised by the organisation ''Citizens' Inititative on National
Issues and Social Progress''.
Clerides will be guest of honour at the event which will be addressed by
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos, Cyprus Foreign Minister
Alecos Michailides and main opposition New Democracy deputy Stavros
Dimas.
Car bomb in Crete injures police officer's wife
A senior police official's wife was seriously injured in Iraklio, Crete at
9.30 this morning when a bomb exploded as she entered her car. The wife of
Kostas Soldatos, director of Iraklio's security police, was rushed to
hospital with serious injuries. The car was completely destroyed in the
blast.
Later, it was announced that the bomb had been connected to the car's
ignition. The blast threw the car a distance five metres and caused damage
to five other cars as well as homes and shops
Georgia Soldatos is currently undergoing surgery after losing her left leg
and sustaining severe injuries to her other leg. Doctors at Iraklio
University Hospital say her life is not in danger.
It is believed that Soldatos' family and not he himself was the target of
the attack, as Soldatos always used his official car, while the family car
was usually driven by his wife.
One of the couple's two daughters had a lucky escape, as her mother was
about to drive her to an English lesson. However, the child had not yet got
into the car. The blast occurred near a children's playground, fortunately
empty at the time due to rain.
Public Order Minister George Romeos today strongly condemned the bomb
attack.
Asked by reporters in Komotini, northern Greece, if the attack was in any
way connected with terrorist groups, Romeos said he had already instructed
the competent service to conduct an investigation.
Greece confident of meeting Maastricht criteria
The European Union Council of National Economy Ministers (ECOFIN) convened
in Brussels yesterday to examine the course of European economiy issues
such as economic growth, Economic and Mone-tary Union and unemployment.
Greece was represented by National Economy Minister Yiannos Papantoniou.
National delegations, including Athens', stressed that the "15" should take
specific measures to strengthen employment through backing investment
initiatives by small- and medium-size enterprises; promotion of inter-
European networks and implementation of a more flexible monetary policy by
member-states.
Addressing the session, Mr. Papantoniou outlined the positive performance
of the Greek economy which, he said, was recognised by the European
Commission in its recent economic report.
He said that from 14.4 per cent in 1993 the Greek public deficit will
decrease to 4.2 per cent of GDP in 1997. Inflation from 12 per cent will
drop to 4.5 per cent at the end of the year, while the country's growth
rate, negative until recently, will re ach 3.3 per cent of GDP at the end
of the year, he noted.
Mr. Papantoniou said Greece expects to meet the terms and conditions set
out in the Maastricht Treaty in 1998 for participation in the single
currency, adding that in 1999 the country will claim its equal participation
in economic and monetary union.
FM officials begin meeting in Sofia
Foreign Ministry officials of the countries of southeast Europe began two
days of talks in Sofia today on regional cooperation initiatives, according
to an ANA despatch from the Bulgarian capital.
Citing a Bulgarian News Agency (BTA) report, the despatch said the meeting
was being held within the framework of decisions taken at the foreign
ministers' meeting of 6-7 July in Sofia.
Sofia has assumed the role of coordinator of the multilateral regional
cooperation efforts until the next foreign ministers' meeting which will be
held in Greece this year.
The agenda proposed by Sofia for the present meeting of foreign ministry
political directors concerns joint action with respect to other regional
cooperation initiatives. The meeting will also provide the opportunity for
an exchange of views on participation in initiatives of the Black Sea
Economic Cooperation (BSEC) organisation and the Central European
Initiative (KEP).
Proposals are also expected to be put forward on basic issues, which will
be discussed at the foreign ministers' meeting in Greece.
The two-day meeting will also be attended by representatives of the
European Commission.
Meanwhile, Bulgarian Foreign Minister Stoyan Stalev and Greece's Ambassador
to Bulgaria, Panayiotis Karakasis, today signed a memorandum of understanding
in Sofia concerning the establishment of a Regional Centre for Road
Infrastructure.
The decision for the establishment of the centre was taken at the meeting
of transport ministers of the countries belonging to the BSEC and KEP in
Sofia in November 1996.
Athens to host WEU security meeting
The Assembly of the Western European Union is holding a colloquy entitled
"Enlarged security: the security problems posed by the enlargement of NATO
and the European institutions" in Athens on March 11-12. The programme is
expected to include addresses by Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos,
Defence Minster Akis Tsohatzopoulos and presentations by representatives of
member states as well as of Central European countries.
Greece: Ankara has no say in Cyprus' EU accession
Greece reiterated yesterday that Cyprus' accession to the European Union
did not depend on Turkey's will nor was it subject to a settlement of its
political problem.
"We have repeatedly underlined that Cyprus' accession to the EU, as this
stems from the Cyprus-EU agreement on March 6, does not depend on Turkey's
will nor is it subject to a settlement of the Cyprus issue," Foreign
Ministry spokesman Constantine Bikas said in an answer to earlier
statements by his Turkish counterpart Omer Akbel.
According to an ANA dispatch from Istanbul, Mr. Akbel said that Cyprus can
become an EU member only after a settlement has been found and when Turkey
also joins the Union.
"Turkey has an obligation, stemming from international law, to put an end
to its occupation of the island and react positively to proposals by the
Cyprus government. But this obligation certainly does not give Turkey the
right to impose its conditions on the EU and on Cyprus," Mr. Bikas
added.
Greece can be a trade bridge between China and Balkans
Greece could serve as a junction for the development of trade relations
between China and the Balkans, the Mediterranean, the Middle East and the
countries of the European Union, according to the conclusions of a study by
the Institute of Studies on the Greek Economy (IMEO).
According to the study, published today in the weekly bulletin of the
Hellenic Overseas Trade Organisation (OPE), the possibilities for the
development of trade relations between Greece and China are unlimited.
To date, it notes, only four Greek enterprises have become active in China
as far as investing and becoming established in that country is concerned.
The study underlines that long-term strategy and marketing is necessary in
order to identify those sectors in the Chinese market which Greek products
could rapidly penetrate.
In addition to those products already being exported to China with the
assistance of OPE, the study said, other Greek products identified by
Chinese experts during bilateral contacts as being attractive include
marble, olive oil and solar water heaters.
The IMEO study also notes particular interest in the Chinese market for
cooperation with Greece in the sectors of tourism and technology transfer.
FAGE bond issue
Citibank has mediated the successful issuance of a US$120 million (31.5
billion drachmas) bonds loan for the giant Greece-based dairy products
producer FAGE, according to a bank announcement. The loan will have a 10-
year duration without an intermediate p ay off and a stable interest rate
of 9 per cent.
The bond issue in the US market is the first carried out by a wholly Greece-
based company and is the result of a collective effort by FAGE, Citibank
Greece and its international network.
Official burial planned for Greeks who fell in Albania
The remains of Greek soldiers who died during World War Two on the Albanian
front and buried in mass graves are to be gathered and given an official
burial in a cemetery in Albania.
A mass grave containing the skeletons of 50 Greek soldiers has been found
near the village of Vouliarates, while a few days ago, the Greek Embassy in
Tirana was informed that the remains of another five men had been
discovered in the village of Kleisoura.
Post-communist reconstruction, particularly in southern Albania, has
resulted in many such discoveries. Many local residents, mostly ethnic
Greeks, knew of the existence of these unofficial cemeteries but did ot
dare maintain the graves because of ban on religious activity by the
communist regime.
However, the grave at Vouliarates was secretly maintained for fifty years
by Dimitris Bakas. Before dying in 1971, he handed over care of the
graveyard to his son Thomas, along with a list of names of those buried
there, all soldiers who fell in the battle of Tepeleni.
Following a recent visit to Albania by the Greek chief of staff Wing
Commander Athanasios Tzoganis, it was decided to form a joint Greek-Albania
commission to discuss creating a large cemetery and memorial to the Greek
soldiers who fell in Albania during the Italian campaign.
WEATHER
Locally cloudy with possible rain in most parts of the country, especially
in central east Greece, the Peloponnese, the Cyclades islands, Crete and
southeastern Aegean Sea, where gale force winds will prevail, but will
subside in the afternoon. Athens will be cold and overcast with temperatures
between 7-12C. Thessaloniki will be partly cloudy with moderate northeastern
winds and temperatures between 2-7C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Monday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 262.949
Pound sterling 426.282 Cyprus pd 519.808
French franc 45.979 Swiss franc 178.064
German mark 155.179 Italian lira (100) 15.735
Yen (100) 211.881 Canadian dlr. 194.630
Australian dlr. 201.237 Irish Punt 416.382
Belgian franc 7.521 Finnish mark 52.449
Dutch guilder 138.245 Danish kr. 40.716
Swedish kr. 35.500 Norwegian kr. 39.041
Austrian sch. 22.056 Spanish peseta 1.835
Portuguese escudo 1.548
(M.P.)