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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Meet Europe's far-right groups


Meet Europe's far-right groups
Washington Post (blog)
The popularity of Greece's anti-immigrant Golden Dawn party has soared in recent months, as the Washington Post's Anthony Faiola reports. But Greece is far from the only country in which anti-immigrant and Islamophobic sentiments have been on the rise.


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Meet Europe’s far-right groups

The popularity of Greece’s anti-immigrant Golden Dawn party has soared in recent months, as the Washington Post’s Anthony Faiola reports. But Greece is far from the only country in which anti-immigrant and Islamophobic sentiments have been on the rise.

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Anti-Immigrant Golden Dawn Rises In Greece

ATHENS — At first glance, the shop on a nondescript street in this chaotic capital looks standard issue military. Fatigues. Camouflage. Hunting gear. Deeper inside, the political message emerges. Black T-shirts emblazoned with modified swastikas — the symbol of the far right Golden Dawn Party — are on sale. A proudly displayed sticker carries a favorite party slogan: “Get the Stench out of Greece.”

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Greek restaurant to open on Franklin Street


Greek restaurant to open on Franklin Street
Durham Herald Sun
Greek restaurant planned: Giorgios Bakatsias, a restaurateur behind a group of restaurants in the Triangle including City Kitchen, the American brasserie operating in the place of what was Spice Street in Chapel Hill, is planning to open an authentic ...


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CDC issues malaria outbreak update for Greece


Examiner.com

CDC issues malaria outbreak update for Greece
Examiner.com
In a follow-up to a story last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that the malaria outbreak in Greece continues to grow, in some cases, reaching areas of the country where the parasitic disease has not been previously ...


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On Corsica, the intrigue of crime and politics claims another life

In Napoleon's birthplace, riven by feuds between bandits and nationalists, a brilliant lawyer's murder brings deep pessimism

Even by Corsican standards of cold-bloodedness, the assassination of Antoine Sollacaro was shocking.

Not because it was especially brutal on an island where a father was recently gunned down in front of his young children and a woman was shot eight times in the back outside a shopping centre last year. Not even because it was that unusual; Sollacaro's murder was the 16th this year in Corsica. Hours before he was killed, another body had been found in a car up one of the island's many mountains.

Sollacaro's murder was shocking because he was a lawyer, recognised as a brilliant advocate and a man who defended Corsican nationalists, traditionally associated with such violence. "I'd have been more surprised if the priest was shot in his church," one lawyer said after the killing. "To shoot a lawyer, this is very symbolic."

Marc Maroselli, the president of the bar, described the murder as intolerable. "It is cowardly and shows the slide into deadly madness that is covering Corsica in blood," he said.

Islanders living with the daily drip-drip of violence believed Sollacaro's profession was his protection, that it conferred some kind of guarantee in the Corsican underworld's code of conduct. Except that on Wednesday morning it didn't.

Sollacaro, 63, was driving to work in his black convertible Porsche when he decided to pop into a Total petrol station just outside the Corsican capital, Ajaccio, to buy his morning newspaper. His vehicle was still moving when a BMW motorcycle came alongside. The pillion rider drew an automatic pistol and fired at least five shots into the lawyer's head and several more into his body. As the car hit a wall with Sollacaro slumped dead over the wheel, the assassin sped off.

Murderous violence is nothing new in Corsica. The Ile de Beauté, famed for its mountains, pine groves and sandy beaches, has a heart of darkness and a history of collective and individual slaughter. The island has been a battleground since the first century BC with Carthaginians, followed by Greeks, Etruscans, Romans, Vandals, Visigoths, Saracens and other invaders spilling blood over this extraordinarily lush and beautiful rock in the Mediterranean. It was, after all, Corsica that spawned one of the ultimate international braggarts and bullies, Napoleon Bonaparte.

Between 1821 and 1852, the "vendetta" code of honour is believed to have led to 4,300 murders. In the 1950s, the crime and bloodshed was linked to the French Connection, a network of international heroin smugglers. In the 1970s, it was dominated by nationalists and organised criminals and some people who were both.

The nationalists have struggled against Paris's rule since 1768 when Corsica became French – it is one of the country's 27 administrative regions today – but the movement reached its apogee in 1998, when members killed the prefect Claude Erignac, the French government's highest representative on the island. Sollacaro famously defended the man convicted of Erignac's murder, Yvan Colonna, and a number of other leading nationalists.

Since the start of 2007, there have been around 100 killings and at least another 100 attempted murders, most blamed on disputes and tit-for-tat score-settling between mafia-like gangs of what the local people call "bandits".

Few of the killers make it to court. Most are themselves killed in revenge, creating an endless spiral of violence and bloodshed that becomes deeply personal. The French magazine L'Express said this made Corsica, with a population of just over 300,000 but where there are an estimated 30,000 weapons, the "bloodiest" region in western Europe, and more crime-ridden than Sicily.

On Friday, Sollacaro's coffin made the slow and winding 63km journey from Ajaccio south through the mountains and pine forests to his birthplace, the former fishing port of Propriano. As the bells of Notre Dame de la Miséricorde jangled and the luxury motor cruisers and yachts at the port jiggled in their moorings, up to 1,000 friends, relatives, colleagues and residents gathered outside the already packed church to pay their respects.

The lawyers donned their fur-trimmed robes and looked grim. Hard men with red eyes embraced and wept. Elegant, tanned women in stilettos fiddled with gold jewellery.

Given the autumn sun and the occasion, the dress code adopted by most mourners, dark glasses and tailored black suits, was entirely appropriate. Given the setting and circumstances, it became cinematic and vaguely ominous.

Afterwards, the mourners lined up to offer their condoléances according to local tradition: to the women of the family inside the church, the men outside. Some spoke of a "gangrene" or "cancer" on the island, but most said that it was not a time for talk. Jacques, aged 81, a retired sheep farmer, shook his weatherbeaten face but could not find many words to say.

"I don't know what's happened to Corsica, it is terrible to see what has happened to our island. Nothing will ever be the same."

He added: "In the past, murders have been over questions of honour, but now life is cheap. Where is the honour in this killing? Young people use bullets to resolve their differences, but bullets resolve nothing."

Pierre-Louis Maurel, a former president of the bar in the northern city of Bastia, said he was a lifelong personal friend of the dead man.

"Antoine was a lawyer, a defender of men," he said. "We do not know if he was targeted as a man or as a lawyer. If he was targeted for his advocate's robes, then it is very symbolic; it is nothing less than an attack on democracy, liberty and justice. It means the killers respect nobody and nothing. I hope this is not true, but I fear it is. As lawyers, that makes us very afraid."

Many Corsicans blame the French establishment for the island's plight, complaining they have been abandoned to crime, rising unemployment, poverty and economic decline, which they say has left the island's youth disaffected, dangerous and fodder for organised crime.

President François Hollande has described the violence as unacceptable and tomorrow his Socialist government is expected to announce measures to combat it.

If there is stupefaction on Corsica, there is widespread incomprehension elsewhere. "Nobody understands what's going on here and it's impossible to explain," said one French reporter at Sollacaro's funeral on Friday.

"Before, it was the nationalists fighting for independence, then it was nationalists fighting each other, and some were also bandits who started fighting each other for different reasons. Then people started getting killed, not because they were involved in anything but because they knew people who were ..." his voice trailed off. "As I say, impossible to explain."

Veteran Corsican journalist Jacques Renucci described a sense of collective resignation and pessimism. "People here are not in fact particularly shocked by the killing, sadly. What they're shocked about is that someone so high-profile was targeted," he said.

Renucci added: "Every time Corsicans say 'never again', and it happens time and time again. They hark back to a golden age on the island when everyone lived happily together, but it is a myth, a fiction.

"The truth is we have always killed each other, and I am not optimistic that we're about to stop."


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Amid the Echoes of an Economic Crash, the Sounds of Greek Society Being Torn

Divisions are rising to the surface as neo-Nazis clash with leftists and immigrants, lawmakers become mired in scandals and tensions increase between the haves and have-nots.

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Albanian police seize huge amount of marijuana bound for neighbouring Greece

TIRANA, Albania - Police in southern Albania say they have seized 3.7 tons of marijuana plants bound for neighbouring Greece.

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The rise of Greece's Golden Dawn


euronews

The rise of Greece's Golden Dawn
Washington Post
The rise of Greece's Golden Dawn. Ultranationalist party raises fears as it builds a network of public aid reserved only for Greek citizens and is accused of violence against immigrants. Wielding torches, members of the Greek ultranationalist party ...
Greece sees rise in racist attacks on immigrantseuronews
Greece: Racist attacks on immigrants growUPI.com

all 4 news articles »

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Greece to press on with austerity to clinch loans


AFP

Greece to press on with austerity to clinch loans
AFP
ATHENS — Greece is to redouble its efforts to reach a deal with its creditors so that the loans it needs are handed over, the country's finance minister said in an interview published Saturday. "We have completed 90 percent of the road for the payment ...
Greece focused on new efforts to reach bailout dealIrish Examiner

all 10 news articles »

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Greeks Disapprove of Merkel's Visit, More Austerity


Greeks Disapprove of Merkel's Visit, More Austerity
Greek Reporter
German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed solidarity with Greece during her recent visit to Athens, but her discussions with Prime Minister Antonis Samaras over additional budget reductions is being met with sarcastic disapproval in the blogosphere.

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Merkel's toughest political ally turns milder on Greece


euronews

Merkel's toughest political ally turns milder on Greece
Reuters
MUNICH (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel appears to have convinced the toughest audience in her political camp that Greece should be given the benefit of the doubt, and possibly more time to meet its painful savings targets. Venturing south ...
Greeks Disapprove of Merkel's Visit, More AusterityGreek Reporter

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Israeli naval vessels take control of Gaza boat


Irish Independent

Israeli naval vessels take control of Gaza boat
USA TODAY
The SV Estelle welcomes aboard Greek pro-Palestinian activist Vassilis Pissias on Oct. 16, 2012. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images). Story Highlights. Swedish-owned boat, the Estelle, tried to defy blockade; Blockade imposed since Hamas seized coastal territory in ...
Israeli Navy boards Gaza-bound ship 'Estelle'Jerusalem Post
Gaza-bound ship Estelle intercepted by Israeli forcesThe Guardian
Navy seizes Gaza-bound Finnish shipYnetnews
Haaretz -Voice of America (blog) -Reuters
all 385 news articles »

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Ben Needham: Grandfather to join Kos search


The Guardian

Ben Needham: Grandfather to join Kos search
BBC News
The grandfather of a child, who went missing on a Greek island 21 years ago, is joining a new police search. Officers are searching land on Kos for the remains of Ben Needham, from Sheffield, who was 21 months old when he vanished in 1991. Experts from ...
British police begin digging for missing toddler Ben NeedhamTelegraph.co.uk
Ben Needham's disappearance is a matter for Greek policeThe Guardian
Greek, British police start joint search for Ben Needham, British toddler ...Edmonton Journal
Sky News -Scotsman -Daily Mail
all 334 news articles »

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Grandfather joins search for Ben

The grandfather of a Sheffield toddler, who went missing on a Greek island 21 years ago, is to join the new police search.

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Greece sees rise in racist attacks on immigrants


euronews

Greece sees rise in racist attacks on immigrants
euronews
Immigrants living in Greece are increasingly becoming scapegoats for the economic crisis, say local NGOs. The Greek Council for Refugees says the government has recently intensified a campaign to round up illegal migrants to help quell public anger ...


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Greek island of Lesbos has the ultimate cute factor


Greek island of Lesbos has the ultimate cute factor
Fraser Coast Chronicle
Its 11 million olive trees are reputed to be the most productive olive-bearing trees in the Greek islands and produce the good olive oil that Greece is so rightfully proud of. Lesbos is the third largest of the Greek islands, after Crete and Euboea and ...

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Greek Orthodox church makes progress toward new building in Camarillo


Greek Orthodox church makes progress toward new building in Camarillo
Ventura County Star
Gary Kyriacou, parish priest at St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church in Camarillo, remembers being a boy and going with his father to watch the progress on an apartment building the family owned being built. "I remember thinking how cool it was that my ...


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British police begin digging for missing toddler Ben Needham


The Guardian

British police begin digging for missing toddler Ben Needham
Telegraph.co.uk
The mother of toddler Ben Needham, who went missing 21 years ago on a Greek holiday island, has said she supports a major new search operation aimed at finding her son which is beginning today. A team of British police officers and search specialists ...
Ben Needham's disappearance is a matter for Greek policeThe Guardian
Greek, British police start joint search for Ben Needham, British toddler ...Edmonton Journal
Ben Needham: New Search For Toddler BeginsSky News
BBC News -Scotsman -Express.co.uk
all 333 news articles »

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Euro leaders might soon release second cache of Greece funds


AFP

Euro leaders might soon release second cache of Greece funds
Economic Times
BERLIN: The euro zone leaders have commended the progress made by Greece in implementing far-reaching reforms to overcome its three-year-old debt crisis and hinted at the possibility of releasing 31.5 billion euros (USD 41 billion) bailout funds ...
Greece and SpainBusiness Insider
Rompui:Greece Must Reform to Remain in the EuroGreek Reporter
Euro area heads say Greece has made good progressMarketWatch
OpenMarket.org -AFP -Agenzia Giornalistica Italia
all 40 news articles »

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