Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 97-06-23
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 23/06/1997 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Philippine President Ramos begins official visit
- Domestic flights cancelled
- Concert to press for Athens 2004 Olympics bid
- Albanian PM Fino confident of success in elections
- Athens condemns Ciller's statements
- FYROM requests Greek support for EU agreement
- Greece pays tribute to Andreas Papandreou`s legacy
- Mount Athos exhibition warmly welcomed
- Defence minister in US for talks
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Philippine President Ramos begins official visit
Philippine President Fidel Ramos, the first head of state of the Philippines
to vist Greece, today held talks with Prime Minister Costas Simitis aimed
at strengthening political and economic ties between the two countries.
Earlier, he met with President Costis Stephanopoulos with whom he discussed
a wide range of issues of interest to the two countries.
Ramos arrived in Athens Sunday night at the head of a 12-member official
delegation on the last leg of a tour of Britain, Oman and Greece to drum up
foreign investments.
During the visit, a number of agreements will be signed, including a
bilateral cultural accord and a memorandum of understanding between the
Philippine Bureau of Export Trade Promotion and the Hellenic Foreign Trade
Board.
The Philippine delegation includes Labour Secretary Leonardo Quisumbing,
Trade and Industry Secretary cesar Baautista, Senator Alberto Romulo, and
Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Rodolfo Severin, who will meet with Foreign
Minister Theodoros Pangalos this afternoon.
Ramos is due to meet this afternoon with leaders of various political
parties, Greek shipowners and managers of Greek-flag vessels, which employ
about 36,000 Filippino seamen.
Before leaving tomorrow, Ramos will also meet with representatives of
various Filippino organisations in Greece, where about 25,000 Filippinos
are employed, mostly as domestic help.
The main purpose of Ramos' visit is to further political, maritime and
economic ties between the two countries. Philippine trade with Greece,
though small-scale, has been steadily increassig over the last five
years.
A West Point graduate, Ramos, 69, was a former minister of national defence
and chief of staff of the Philippine armed forces before becoming president
in 1992.
Ramos' talks with Stephanopoulos and Simitis focussed on bilateral
relations, given the large number of Filippino workers in Greece and seamen
on Greek-flag ships, and the situation in the Balkans, southeast Europe and
southeast Asia.
President Stephanopoulos told reporters after his meeting with Ramos, which
was also attended by Pangalos and Labour Minister Miltiades Papaioannou,,
that there we4re no problems in bilateral relations and stressed the
prospects for further expanding cooperation between the two countries.
He said he had briefed his Philippine counterpart on the problems in the
Balkans and southeast Europe, adding that the substantial presence of
Filippinos in Greece constitued an "additional bond in our relations".
President Ramos underlined the common interests of the two maritime
countries, noting that bilateral relations were also strengthened through
the dialogue that had commenced between the EU (of which Greece was a
member) and ASEAN (to which the Philippines belonged).
Ramos stressed the prospects for strengthening the ties between the two
countries in the commercial, shipbuilding and repair and invesstment
sectors, adding that consultations would begin for an agreement that would
promote protection of investments.
He said he had also discussed with Stephanopoulos the Filippinos living and
working in Greece and measures for their further protection.
Domestic flights cancelled
Nineteen scheduled domestic flights of Olympic Aviation were cancelled this
morning as a result of the ''go slow'' by the company's technicians and
mechanics in support of branch demands.
The president of the technicians and mechanics' labour union, Theodosis
Arbatzoglou stressed however that the ''go slow'' was not tantamount to
strike action, but a refusal to work overtime.
''We are working our normal eight-hour shifts, in order to press for the
hiring of seasonal staff who are necessary for maintaining the normal
flights schedule,'' he added.
Up to noon, a further five scheduled flights eventually left after delays
of three to four hours, causing irritation among passengers waiting to
travel to the islands, many of whom were visitors from abroad.
Olympic Aviation said it would announce within the day changes to the
flight schedule for the next fifteen days, which will in effect result in a
reduction in the number of flights to and from the Greek islands.
In particular, the number of flights to and from Chios, Samos, Limnos,
Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini, Skiathos, Zakynthos, Kythera, Naxos,
Milos, Syros and Paros will be less than normal for the summer months.
Arbatzoglou claimed that Olympic Aviation's flight schedule relied entirely
on overtime work, which often meant employees having to work an additional
six to ten hours after their regular eight-hour shift.
He added that three aircraft were currently grounded and the problems for
passengers were increasing.
Meanwhile, passengers whose flights to and from the islands and Thessaloniki
have been cancelled are going on waiting lists, which is in turn creating
serious problems for flights which would otherwise depart on time.
Concert to press for Athens 2004 Olympic bid
Cultural events within the framework of Athens' bid to host the 2004
Olympic Games will get under way on July 2 with a joint concert by world
renowned Yugoslav composer Goran Bregovic and one of Greece's most popular
singers, George Dalaras.
''The cultural events which we are organising constitute a prelude to the
four-year cultural Olympiad which will be held from 2001 to 2004,'' Athens
2004 Bid Committee President Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki told reporters
today.
''It is a great honour for us that George Dalaras and Goran Bregovic will
be inaugurating this cultural period and are providing such valuable
support for Athens' bid to host the 2004 Games,'' she added.
''I am a strong supporter of the Olympic Games. I was bitterly disappointed
and hurt when we were not selected for the 1996 Olympics,'' Dalaras
said.
Bregovic said he remembered the Winter Games in Sarajevo, where he was born
and grew up.
''It was one of the most pleasant experiences of my life. I hope with all
my heart that Athens will have the opportunity to experience the joyous
moments of an Olympiad,'' the composer said.
Albanian PM Fino confident of success in elections
Albanian Prime Minister Bashkim Fino today expressed confidence that
general elections in his country next Sunday would produce a broadly based
coalition government, and called on all Albanians currently in Greece to
return home to vote, according to an ANA despatch from Tirana.
''Bearing in mind the situation which has been shaped and expressing the
positions of my party, I believe that the elections will result in a
broadly based coalition government,'' Fino said in an exclusive interview
with the ANA.
Asked about the difficulties experienced by the two main parties in
presenting their programmes in certain parts of the country, Fino said it
was his party which had proposed alternative campaign methods, such as
television or radio ''but the other parties preferred rallies and
tours''.
Replying to another question on the apparent reluctance of the approximately
400,000 Albanians in Greece to return to their country to vote, Fino
underlined that they should return to Albania to vote, particularly since
they had been given assurances that they would be able to come back to
Greece.
Fino said Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos and the Greek Embassy in
Tirana had given assurances that coaches of Albanians returning to vote
would be protected by the multinational force in Albania and local police
squads.
Athens condemns Ciller's statements
Turkish Foreign Minister Tansu Ciller's statements on Greek-Turkish
relations are part of the ''domestic political game'' in the neighbouring
country and serve only to compromise both her and Turkey, government
spokesman Dimitris Reppas said today.
This situation, Reppas added, merely creates an adverse climate which is
''pointless''.
The spokesman also dismissed statements by Ciller on Cyprus' accession to
the European Union, stressing that ''the course of the island republic's
accession has been decided by the EU''.
In a written statement issued by the Turkish Foreign Ministry, Ciller
reiterated that Cyprus could not join the EU before Turkey.
Reppas once again condemned the violations of Cyprus airspace by Turkish
aircraft, adding that ''all the appropriate representations'' had been
made.
FYROM requests Greek support for EU agreement
The head of the FYROM liaison office in Greece, Ljupco Arsovski, requested
Greece's assistance for speedy approval by the European Parliament of the
EU-FYROM Cooperation Agreement, informed sources said.
The request was made during a meeting with Alternate Foreign Minister
George Papandreou held at Arsovski's request.
The same sources salso said that during the half-hour meeting Arsovski
expressed desire to seek ways of overcoming the practical problems that
will arise from the application of the Schengen agreement.
Greece pays tribute to Andreas Papandreou's legacy
Prime Minister Costas Simitis last night paid tribute to the legacy of
Andreas Papandreou at an event at the Athens Concert Hall, on the first
anniversary of the death of the late founder and president of ruling party
PASOK.
The function at the Athens Concert Hall ended a day of commemoration to
Papandreou, begun with a memorial service at midday at the Athens First
Cemetery attended by more than 2,000 people.
Mr. Simitis said the event - which included an address from former French
culture minister Jack Lang and a concert by singer George Dalaras conducted
by composer Stavros Xarhakos - aimed at honouring the memory of a great
politician.
The founder of PASOK was a charismatic leader, a visionary, a man who gave
shape to the people's dreams, who transformed concerns into speech and
political prospect, as well as the sensitivities and claims of the
progressive side, Mr. Simitis said.
"He showed that fatalism, acceptance, compliance is not necessary and
neither must it rule our lives. This is his great lesson to all of us," Mr.
Simitis said, adding that Andreas Papandreou was decisive in leading Greece
away from "the climate of post-civil war psychosis".
"Struggles to redefine the visions of the democratic left in modern
conditions of market globalisation and technological revolutions also link
us to Andreas Papandreou, because he was the ideologist who sought new
paths for socialism which left prevailing models," he said.
Mount Athos exhibition warmly welcomed
The long-awaited exhibition of priceless relics from the all-male monastic
community of Mount Athos was officially opened by President Kostis
Stephanopoulos at Thessaloniki's Byzantine Museum on Saturday.
The major event of this year's Thessaloniki Cultural Capital activities
received an enthusiastic response from the public, with more than 2,000
people visiting the exhibition yesterday, the first day it was open to the
public.
Prime Minister Costas Simitis was also in attendance at Saturday's official
opening.
"This exhibition once again teaches the world what Byzantium was and what
it offered to civilisation through time," President Stephanopoulos
said.
Mr. Simitis said in a brief address that the exhibition was "Orthodoxy's
response", as expressed by Mount Athos, the greatest Byzantine and post-
Byzantine monument in Europe.
The proceeds from the sale of tickets and special publications will go to
Mount Athos for the construction of works to be decided by the Holy
Community.
Defence minister in US for talks
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos arrived in Washington for a
six-day visit to the US in the context of the Greek presidency of the
Western European Union's (WEU) cross-Atlantic activities.
While there, he will address a meeting of WEU and NATO defence ministers,
meet with US Defence Secretary William Cohen, Deputy Secretary of State
Strobe Talbott, Congresswoman Olympia Snowe and Congressman Paul Sarbanes,
address a US Senate Committee a nd hold talks with American businessmen on
matters concerning defence and the economy respectively.
WEATHER
Fine weather is forecast for Greece today with only a few scattered clouds
in the north. Strong northerly winds in the southern Aegean Sea, but
elsewhere winds will be mild. Athens will be sunny and hot with temperatures
between 23-38C. Thessaloniki moslty sunny with temperature ranging from 20-
35C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 270.756
Pound sterling 446.340 Cyprus pd 527.347
French franc 46.449 Swiss franc 188.177
German mark 156.796 Italian lira (100) 16.022
Yen (100) 237.088 Canadian dlr. 195.265
Australian dlr. 202.889 Irish Punt 409.636
Belgian franc 7.599 Finnish mark 52.368
Dutch guilder 139.381 Danish kr. 41.178
Swedish kr. 35.129 Norwegian kr. 37.339
Austrian sch. 22.284 Spanish peseta 1.859
Port. Escudo 1.552
(M.P.)
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