Athens News Agency: News in English (PM), 98-06-20
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 20/06/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Commercial Bank approves sale of Ionian,
- Inquiry called into violence
- Simitis says tension over Greek F-16s'
- Black Sea bank directors focus on spending since '94
- U.S. urges end to tension over Cyprus
- Tsohatzopoulos defends presence of Greek jets
- President to visit Cyprus
- Bomb explodes at right-wing newspaper office
- Weather
- Foreign Exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Commercial Bank approves sale of Ionian,
The state-owned Commercial Bank of Greece shareholders' general assembly
late last night approved the sale of at least 51 per cent of shares for its
subsidiary, Ionian Bank, as part of the government's wide-ranging
privatisation plan.
The bank's general assembly was held late last night after an Athens court
ruling allowing for the assembly to reconvene, following serious incidents
which disrupted a previous session earlier in the day.
Finance Undersecretary George Drys and National Economy Undersecretary
Christos Pachtas, present at last night's assembly, told reporters
afterwards that the government's privatisation programme will unwaveringly
be implemented.
Protesting Ionian Bank employees broke up that Commercial Bank shareholders'
meeting.
At the morning meeting, several protesting Ionian employees smas-hed chairs,
overturned tables and jostled shareholders, forcing them to leave the hall
where the meeting was being held at a downtown Athens hotel.
A public prosecutor ordered an urgent preliminary investigation into the
violence that disrupted the morning shareholders' meeting, stalling debate
and a vote on the sale of Ionian's majority stake through the bourse.
Police are studying TV footage of the rampage to identify perpetrators.
Employees at Ionian Bank have staged a rolling strike since May 11 to
protest the privatisation, despite court rulings declaring the strike
illegal. Other banks have held one-off stoppages in solidarity. Both banks
are listed on the Athens bourse.
Earlier this week, a court rejected a petition by Commercial's management
seeking to limit attendance by bank employees at the shareholders meeting
in order to forestall any disruption.
Inquiry called into violence
An Athens public prosecutor later ordered an urgent preliminary investigation
to be carried out into the circumstances which led to the cancellation of
this morning's meeting. Prosecutor George Koliokostas ordered Athens police
to establish whether acts of violence and damage to property were
committed. Koliokostas also asks that depositions be taken from witnesses
present at the meeting, including the chairman and members of the board of
directors of Commercial Bank and the police officers on duty in the
hall.
Simitis says tension over Greek F-16s'
Prime Minister Costas Simitis said yesterday that the brief presence of
four Hellenic Air Force F-16 jets at the Paphos Air Base in Cyprus had
nothing to do with the current tension being created by Turkey, since
Ankara had been cultivating tension even b efore the visit.
The premier, who was quoted by government spokesman Dimitris Reppas in
press statements, was addressing a joint meeting of the inner cabinet and
the ruling PASOK party's political secretariat, which he briefed on the
results of the European Union summit held in Cardiff earlier in the
week.
Mr. Reppas quoted Mr. Simitis as telling the meeting that the Greek
aircraft P on a training mission P had been invited by the legitimate
Cypriot government, had conducted their flight in a completely peaceful and
harmless manner and that "this tension is totally unjustified."
The premier also said that the recent escalation of tension by Turkey had
become a usual phenomenon shortly before and after EU summits.
Mr. Simitis told the meeting that Turkey was repeating the mistakes of the
past, noting in particular that the present political situation in the
neighbouring country was in a transitional phase, in view of the early
elections to be held next year.
This fluidity, he said, was tempting Turkish leaders to try and increase
their influence.
Four Greek F-16 fighters and a C-130 military transport plane stopped
briefly at the Cypriot airbase early this week, carrying senior Greek
military officials, as part of plans to evaluate the operational capacity
of the base within the framework of the joint Greece-Cyprus defence
doctrine.
Turkey in turn sent six F-16 warplanes to the Turkish-occupied northern
part of Cyprus on Thursday.
According to an ANA despatch from Ankara yesterday, the six Turkish
warplanes have since departed.
Black Sea bank directors focus on spending since '94
The first two-day meeting of the Black Sea development bank's board of
directors opened in Thessaloniki yesterday morning, with the main topic
being approval of spending from 1994 to the present P US$400,000 P all
covered by the National Bank of Greece.
The debt will be paid back after a majority decision taken during
yesterdayYs session, to which however, objections were voiced by directors
from the Ukraine and Turkey.
Also discussed was the construction of a building near ThessalonikiYs
Macedonia Airport to house the bankYs headquarters, with a relevant request
to be submitted with the Greek government.
A draft agreement for the development bankYs operation is expected to be
ratified by Parliament in the fall.
U.S. urges end to tension over Cyprus
"The United States have urged Greece and Turkey to limit tension and avoid
actions which could be construed by the other side as being provocative,"
White House spokesman Mike McCurry said late Thursday night. An ANA
dispatch from Washington also quoted McCurry as saying that "the two
countries can find ways to reduce tension in the Aegean". McCurry was
commenting on tension that has arisen after the landing of Greek and
Turkish warplanes on Cyprus, the northern third of which has been occupied
by Turkish troops for the past 24 years. Four Greek F-16 jetfighters and a
C-130 military transport plane stopped briefly at the Cypriot airbase in
Paphos early this week, carrying senior Greek military officials, as part
of plans to evaluate the operational capacity of the base within the
framework of the joint Greece-Cyprus defence doctrine. Turkey in turn sent
six F-16 warplanes to the Turkish-occupied northern sector on Thursday.
Tsohatzopoulos defends presence of Greek jets
National Defence Minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos said later it would do Turkey
no good to use the Cyprus problem, citing Nicosia's planned installation of
Russian-made S-300 anti-aircraft missiles or Greece's support for Cyprus
within the two countries' joint defence doctrine, as a resonse to results
of the EU summit in Cardiff. Tsohatzopoulos called on the neighbouring
country to take advantage of the "room given it" and work towards adopting
the conditions prevailing in EU countries in order to upgrade its relations
with the Community. Commenting on the visit to Paphos air base earlier
this week of Greek jets, Tsohatzopoulos reiterated that it was Nicosia's
inalienable right to grant permission for brief visits by military aircraft
within the framework of the training policy followed by Greece and Cyprus
as part of its joint defence doctrine.
President to visit Cyprus
President of the Republic Kostis Stephanopoulos will be made an honorary
citizen of the city of Evagora by the Municipality of Famagusta and
presented with the "broken gold key" of the Turkish-occupied city of
Famagusta. Stephanopoulos will be making the first-ever visit to Cyprus by
a Greek President on June 25-28. The ceremony will take place on Sunday,
June 28 at the Famagusta Cultural Centre in the town of Deryneia.
Bomb explodes at right-wing newspaper office
A home-made bomb exploded outside the offices of the extreme-right wing
newspaper "Stochos" (Target) in downtown Thessaloniki early today, causing
damage but no injuries, police said. The make-shift bomb, placed at the
entrance of the newspaper's fifth-floor offices on Vassileos Irakliou steet,
destroyed the office door. Police said the damage was minimal because only
one of the two gas cannisters exploded. So far, no one has claimed
responsibility for the attack.
WEATHER
Mostly fair weather is forecast in most parts of Greece today with the
possibility of scattered showers or storms in Macedonia and Thrace. Winds
will be northerly, northwesterly, moderate to strong.
Temperatures in Athens will range between 19-30C, while in Thessaloniki
from 19-27C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 303.512
British pound 505.940 Japanese yen (100) 225.105
French franc 50.352 German mark 168.843
Italian lira (100) 17.118 Irish Punt 425.370
Belgian franc 8.180 Finnish mark 55.552
Dutch guilder 149.663 Danish kr. 44.285
Austrian sch. 23.972 Spanish peseta 1.988
Swedish kr. 38.119 Norwegian kr. 39.944
Swiss franc 201.783 Port. Escudo 1.649
Aus. dollar 187.870 Can. dollar 205.939
Cyprus pound 576.094
(M.S.)
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