Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 97-06-11
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 11/06/1997 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Simitis warns: 'don't relax European unification efforts'
- Major support for SMEs in eastern, southeastern Europe
- Congress pressed to consider sale of warships to Greece
- Albanian Socialist Party delegation in Athens
- Parliament to ratify Schengen Treaty today despite protests
- Budget revenue up 11.8 percent in Jan-May
- National Bank of Greece to lure foreign investors
- Balkan ministers agree on regional trade centre
- Athens Stock Exchange stages technical rebound
- Kos island airport project completed
- V. Papandreou sees increase in Russian tourist flow to Greece
- Sainz wins 44th Acropolis Rally
- Athens athletic championships attract record participation
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Simitis warns: 'don't relax European unification efforts'
Prime Minister Costas Simitis yesterday cautioned that recent changes in
the electoral map of Europe should not cause a relaxation of Greece's
efforts to remain firmly in the process of European unification.
"For Greece, changes in Europe are welcome, they are an encouragement, but
if we stay outside European unification, we shall have deprived the country
of another opportunity. Therefore, there must not only be no illusion of a
relaxation, but on the contrary there must be a new impetus for the
attainment of permanent national objectives," he said during the pre-agenda
debate in Parliament on the government-sponsored "social dialogue" on
economic and labour issues.
He reiterated that the dialogue was a process of planning the developmental
priorities of the country, and agreeing on the social conditions for the
planned policies.
"Social dialogue represents the multiplying dynamics of all the productive
and creative forces of Greek society, and was successfully applied in other
countries such as Spain, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Ireland," he
stressed.
The premier stressed that the government had succeeded in establishing a
climate of confidence in the economy, and that issues concerning the labour
market should be discussed in combination with a policy for development.
Major support for SMEs in eastern, southeastern Europe
European Investment Bank (EIB) vice-president Panayiotis Gennimatas said
yesterday that the European Commission and the EIB are in the process of
drafting two ambitious financial mechanisms to support to private
enterprises, especially small- and medium-s ized enterprises, in eastern
and southeastern European countries which aim to attain full EU membership.
Addressing a meeting of southeast European businessmen in Thessaloniki,
which was timed to coincide with a conference of Balkan foreign ministers
in this northern Greek city Mr. Gennimatas said the programmes aim to
assist those countries converge with the economies of European Union member-
states, so as to be able to become members themselves.
"The first programme concerns a new special pre-accession financial
mechanism, the aim of which will be to facilitate even further the process
of economic convergence. It should be ready by the end of the year," he
said.
"Equally important, and perhaps more interesting for businessmen, is the
planning of an additional financial mechanism for small- and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs), undertaken by the EU, EIB, and the PHARE programme," he
added.
The amount to be disbursed in the form of loans was likely to exceed Ecu3.5
million, while the Community's financial organ par excellence, the PHARE
programme, envisaged additional funding to the tune of Ecu6.7 million until
1999.
Congress pressed to consider sale of warships to Greece
US State Department and Pentagon officials are making representations to
Congress for the sale of three destroyers and two frigates given on loan to
the Hellenic Navy for some time now, according to the military review
"Defense News".
The magazine claimed that the move aims to secure parallel Congressional
authorisation for the delivery of three Perry-type frigates to Turkey, a
sale which has been frozen through the initiative of several US legislators
with pro-Greece sentiments.
Turkey has already paid for the frigates.
Albanian Socialist Party delegation in Athens
An Albanian Socialist Party delegation headed by its leader Fatos Nano will
begin an official four-day visit to Athens today for talks with political
leaders.
The Albanian delegation will meet Prime Minister Costas Simitis, Foreign
Minister Theodoros Pangalos, National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos,
main opposition New Democracy party leader Costas Karamanlis, Coalition of
the Left and Progress leader Nikos Constantopoulos and with the ruling
PASOK party's executive bureau.
Parliament to ratify Schengen Treaty today despite protests
A bill ratifying the Schengen Pact, the European Union's open-border, is
expected to be approved by Parliament today, as both the ruling PASOK and
the main opposition New Democracy have announced support for the controversial
agreement.
The expected ratification comes amid often violent protests outside
Parliament yesterday and late Monday evening by demonstrators mostly
affiliated with fundamentalist Orthodox groups. On Monday, riot police used
teargas to disperse the crowd. Yesterday, a seven-member group of
protesters handed Parliament President Apostolos Kaklamanis a resolution
against the pact.
Protestors, including several clerics, have accused the pact of containing
a direct reference to the the numerical sequence "666", a number representing
the anti-Christ, as stated in St. John's the Divine's Book of Revelation.
Secular critics, on the other hand, have charged that Schengen will create
a massive electronic file of information targetting EU citizens and turning
Europe into a police state.
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou also commented on the pact,
which calls for border controls between EU member-states to be removed, and
for increased cooperation in law enforcement issues, especially customs
checks and screening for non-EU citizens entering the Union.
Commenting, Mr. Papandreou said that according to the pact - allowing free
movement of Greek citizens to all the EU countries which have signed the
agreement - the state will hold information only on citizens which have
been convicted or are under criminal persecution.
"Greek citizens are free to check on the type of information held by the
state," the minister added.
Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas said the Schengen accord would go into
effect when conditions for its implementation were met. He went on to say
that conditions were "ripe."
Greece holds a strong interest in the implementation of Schengen, which
calls for the protection of EU's external border, Mr. Reppas said.
France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Spain, Portugal and Germany
are all countries that have ratified Schengen. Greece, Austria, Italy,
Denmark, Finland and Sweden have signed but not yet fully ratified the
accord through their national legisla tures.
Budget revenue up 11.8 percent in Jan-May
Finance Undersecretary George Drys repeated that the government would
impose no new taxes in 1997 and that it had abandoned its 1996 policy of
debt rescheduling.
Briefing the parliamentary economic affairs committee on state revenue for
1997, Mr. Drys said that implementation of the budget would produce no
major deviations.
"Targets set in the budget are very difficult but attainable," he said.
Revenue had risen by 11.8 percent in the first five months of the year
compared with the corresponding period in 1996 to reach 3.2 trillion
drachmas, Mr. Drys said.
Predicting the course of budget revenue for the rest of the year, Mr. Drys
said that monies from income tax, new state securities and privatisation
would rise.
National Bank of Greece to lure foreign investors
National Bank of Greece will launch an advertising campaign abroad to lure
foreign institutional investors into the domestic market following an
upgrade for its custodian services unit, senior bank officials said.
Inaugurating new premises for the unit, the officials said the bank already
managed shares and debt paper for 1,600 Greek and foreign funds, representing
capital of 1.5 trillion drachmas. Consultancy is part of the package. Part
of the upgrade for the u nit, opened by Governor Theodoros Karadzas, is an
advanced technology computer system.
National Bank's competitors for Athens-based custodian services are
Citibank and Barclays.
Balkan ministers agree on regional trade centre
Balkan ministers meeting in Thessaloniki yesterday agreed to create a
regional centre based in Turkey to promote trade.
They also supported a proposal to extend the activities of the Bucharest-
based Balkan Centre for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises to southeast
Europe.
Athens Stock Exchange stages technical rebound
The Athens Stock Exchange staged a technical recovery on Tuesday after a
four-session fall in prices which pushed the market below support at 1,600
points.
The general index ended 0.88 percent higher at 1,603.84 points but turnover
shrank to 13.9 billion drachmas as massive outflows for a public offer by
Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation (OTE) drained the market. Most
sector indices scored gains.
Banks rose 0.95 percent, Leasing was 1.83 percent up, Insurance gained 0.87
percent, Investment increased 0.72 percent, Industrials were 0.13 percent
up, Construction fell 0.51 percent, Holding rose 0.73 percent and
Miscellaneous rose 0.29 percent. The P arallel Market index fell 0.46
percent.
Investors focused on OTE's shares ahead of its second share offer, starting
today. Its price ended 200 drachmas higher at 7,105 on heavy volume.
Broadly, advancers led decliners by 113 to 104 with another 25 issues
remaining unchanged. Minerva, Ergodata, Kekrops and Flexopak scored the
biggest gains, while Ermis, Parnassos and Mouriadis suffered the heaviest
losses. National Bank of Greece ende d at 36,310 drachmas, Ergobank at 18,
050, Alpha Credit Bank at 19,750, Titan Cement at 25,400, Intracom at 13,
100.
Kos island airport project completed
An airport development and modernisation project for the Dodecanese island
of Kos was completed in record time for the peak summer tourist season.
The project, worth 3.7 billion drachmas, included extension of air terminal
facilities, extension of landing slots by 35,000 square metres - up 100
percent from last year's capacity, runway extension to 2,400 metres, and
the purchase of three new passen ger buses.
V. Papandreou sees increase in Russian tourist flow to Greece
In an interview with "Pravda-5" newspaper, Development Minister Vasso
Papandreou expressed her conviction that in the near future Russian
tourists will occupy third place among visitors to Greece after the Germans
and the British.
Ms Papandreou said 1.2 million tourists from eastern European countries
visited Greece in 1996, a figure representing 12.2 per cent of Greece's
total number of visitors. This figure is expected to increase to 1.35
million in 1997, or 13.5 per cent.
She said traditional relations between Russia and Greece can contribute to
a further significant increase in the number of Russian tourists, provided
that problems are also resolved concerning the ease with which visas are
given to tourists.
Sainz wins 44th Acropolis Rally
Two-time world champion driver Carlos Sainz is the winner of the 44th
Acropolis Rally.
At the end of yesterday's sixth special stage (Analipsi II), the Spanish
driver was in the first place in the general standings with a total penalty
time of 4:56.24. It was the third time Sainz, driving a Ford Escort, won
the Acropolis Rally, after 1990 and 1994.
Second place after 20 special stages went to Juha Kankkunen from Finland
(Ford Escort) with 4:56.41 followed by Briton Richard Burns (Mitsubishi)
with 4:58.31.
Athens athletic championships attract record participation
At least 195 countries will participate in the World Athletics Championsips
at Olympic Stadium in Athens on August 1-10, creating a new international
record regarding participation of countries in such an event.
A total of 2,677 athletes will participate (1,626 men and 1,051 women). The
previous record occurred at the world athletics championships in Goteborg
in 1995 with 1,804 athletes from 191 countries participating.
Greece will participate in the games with 71 men athletes and 56 women. The
largest team will be that of the United States with 74 male and 65 female
athletes, followed by Germany with 116 athletes, Kenya 88, Britain 86,
France 84, Russia 82, Spain 78 a nd Italy with 77.
WEATHER
Unstable weather in several parts of Greece is forecast today with some
local clouds in the mainland in the afternoon with possible local rain in
the mountainous regions of the Peloponnese. Northern and central Greece
will be increasingly cloudy with some rainstorms. Athens will be mostly
sunny with temperatures between 17-30C. Same in Thessaloniki with possible
rain in the afternoon and temperatures between 16-29C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Tuesday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 270.618
Pound sterling 443.166 Cyprus pd 528.875
French franc 46.709 Swiss franc 187.488
German mark 157.956 Italian lira (100) 15.970
Yen (100) 240.560 Canadian dlr. 194.928
Australian dlr. 206.162 Irish Punt 410.093
Belgian franc 7.654 Finnish mark 52.477
Dutch guilder 140.378 Danish kr. 41.491
Swedish kr. 34.674 Norwegian kr. 37.851
Austrian sch. 22.446 Spanish peseta 1.866
Port. Escudo 1.558
(C.E.)
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