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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Friday, July 20, 2018

Ronaldo’s $23,000 tip at Greek resort

Cristiano Ronaldo left a $23,000 tip at a Greek luxury resort he stayed at after Portugal were knocked out of the World Cup. According to British media reports, the Portuguese captain left the huge ti...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.tribuneindia.com

Craving Greek? Here are the top 3 choices in Fayetteville

Looking for a tasty Greek meal near you? Hoodline crunched the numbers to find the top Greek restaurants around Fayetteville, using both Yelp data and our own secret sauce to produce a ranked list of ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT abc11.com

'Clean Islands' Project Launches in GREECE – First Stop: Naxos

The Hellenic Marine Environment Protection Association – HELMEPA and the non-profit organization Aegean Rebreath recently launched the “Clean ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT news.gtp.gr

Milford sailor wins World Championship in GREECE

Meredith Ryan, left, Brian Hayes Jr., and Jeff Hayden, right, sailing toward a World Championship in GREECE the first week in July. — Nigel Vick Photo.


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.milfordmirror.com

Refugees further traumatized by conditions in GREECE'S Moria camp

As refugees continue to arrive on the island of Lesbos, GREECE, the situation in Moria refugee camp is descending into chaos. There are frequent ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.doctorswithoutborders.org

GREECE police ID girl who fell into canal, drowned

GREECE, NY (WROC) - Police have released the identity of the girl found dead Thursday evening in the canal at Henpeck Park in GREECE. GREECE ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.rochesterfirst.com

Natural gas set to expand to all regions of GREECE by 2022

The Greek natural gas network is seen expanding to another 43 cities and towns across the country, including some of its main islands, so as to offer ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.ekathimerini.com

Tragedy in Evros: Bodies of mother and baby recovered, two children still missing

The body of the 36-year-old mother and the youngest among the three missing children, 12-month-old Bekir  have been  recovered on the Turkish side of the Evros river on Friday afternoon more than 24 hours after the boat capsized/ Turkish media report that the mother was holding the baby in her arms. Yok olasın yıkılasın seni … The post Tragedy in Evros: Bodies of mother and baby recovered, two children still missing appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.keeptalkinggreece.com

1,500 free tickets to the unemployed by the Greek National Opera

Cultural food is needed at all times more so because it lifts ones spiritsThanks to a Greek National Opera initiative 1500 tickets will be offered to the unemployed in Gree


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT balkaneu.com

Decision to expel Russian diplomats 'disappointing,' says ambassador

Russia's ambassador to GREECE, Andrey Maslov, has criticized a decision by Athens last week to expel two Russian diplomats and to bar two other ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.ekathimerini.com

Interview of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nikos Kotzias, on ‘Sto Kokkino’ radio, with journalist N. Sverkos (Athens, 3 July 2018)

JOURNALIST: We announced that we would be interviewing the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nikos Kotzias, who is already on the line.Good morning, Mr. Kotzias. N. KOTZIAS: Good morning to your listeners. JOURNALIST: There’s nothing to do but start, Mr. Minister. N. KOTZIAS: I have no desire to comment on Mr. Kammenos, if that’s what you want to start with. It’s not within my competency. The agreement is good. The agreement does not concede national sovereignty, and thus there is no issue of 180 votes being required to pass it. Mr. Kammenos knows this. He is making his political choices, and we are all taking measure of the situation, but it isn’t an issue I would respond on.JOURNALIST: Beyond that, however, do you believe there are MPs who will support the agreement and give a vote of confidence to the government? I ask because there is now an issue of ... N. KOTZIAS: These are two different things. First, for the next six months a vote of confidence cannot be called. Mr. Mitsotakis played that card, having arranged with certain portions of the oligarchy to exert pressure on MPs who are supporting the government. Second: A vote of confidence is one thing; passing the agreement on the Skopje issue is another. The agreement on the Skopje issue has a majority of MPs in Parliament – according to the inclination showed by the MPs themselves, and not just in my opinion. The thing is, up until it comes before parliament, we need to do serious work explaining the agreement. We find that people don’t understand basic aspects of it or that the facts of the agreement are being systematically distorted by the opposition. JOURNALIST: Let’s look at that, because it’s very interesting. Greece has reached an agreement with the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. A lot has been heard about the agreement. There has been a lot of distortion. But we are now going to the next level. Do you think the agreement will move ahead, first of all, in our neighbouring country? Because we see various ... N. KOTZIAS: Look. The agreement is already moving ahead. It was passed in their Parliament by 69 to 0. President Ivanov, who is from the ‘Gruevski camp’, from the ‘New Democracy’ camp, has rejected this agreement, has refused to sign it on the argument that it renders North Macedonia subservient to and a hostage of Greece. In other words, he is saying exactly the reverse of what New Democracy is saying here. But essentially, in terms of methodology, they are saying the same thing. The Gruevski supporters and Ivanov and New Democracy believe that the respective countries in which they live and act have conceded everything to the other country. In other words, Ivanov is accusing Zaev of conceding everything. New Democracy is accusing Tsipras of conceding everything, and essentially they have something in common. They don’t want agreements. They don't want peace. They don’t want peaceful coexistence among the peoples of the Balkans.They live and feed on an ill-conceived nationalism, on a far-right motif and on hostility towards and belittlement of third peoples; an ill-conceived nationalism that has nothing to do with patriotism. They are both using the same motif. And in Parliament, if you remember, I asked – smiling at the Prime Minister – how was it possible for us to have an agreement that New Democracy says gives everything, while in Skopje they – New Democracy’s counterparts – say they have an agreement that gives everything to us. And the answer is either that we have two separate agreements and we are playing a joke on our people, which isn’t the case, or that there is an agreement that resolves the issues created by New Democracy and PASOK. Neither New Democracy nor PASOK likes solutions to problems; they like to live on and perpetuate problems. Ivanov and the opposition in Greece have a common stance. They are against the agreement. JOURNALIST: They are against the agreement. Beyond that, of course, you are also being criticized with regard to the stance of certain member states of the European Union in the recent discussions you had in the context of the Council of the European Union. You are being criticized for perhaps rushing into an agreement, because there is now a postponement – within a reasonable timeframe, of course. But you are being criticized because our neighbour’s accession negotiations with the European Union have been put off. N. KOTZIAS: First of all, the accession negotiations have not begun. What we agreed on last Monday is that the accession negotiations will begin in June 2019. This means the following: that in the coming months the Commission has to do the so-called real work, preparatory work, so that the current Commission – and this is very important – and the current High Representative for foreign affairs and Vice President of the Commission, Mrs. Mogherini, can be in a position to open the negotiations. Because the proposals concerning and opposed to the negotiations with North Macedonia and Albania were for the negotiations to begin after the end of 2019 and thus under a new Commission formed after the European elections, so that we would have to carry out another assessment before opening the negotiations. These are two different things. And the other thing I wanted to say: the agreement with fYROM is not an agreement that we concluded so they could join the European Union and NATO. This country certainly wanted the agreement so that these processes wouldn’t be blocked. FYROM wants to join. We aren’t the ones who have made an issue of its joining or not joining. We resolved the problem because we believe it benefits our country, regardless of whether there is a European Union or NATO. We did it to resolve the problems that are keeping us prisoners of history and, together with these peoples, to look to the future and have a choice. What was our choice? Do we want to have friends or enemies to our north? Second. Do we believe that any problems we have with our friends – and I underscore this – to the north are bigger and of greater importance than those we have with Turkey geopolitically or geostrategically? In other word, should we perhaps resolve our problems with Turkey and focus our energies on Skopje, or should we resolve our problems with Skopje in some rational manner and focus our energies on what we have been calling for over a century now the ‘eastern question’? I think it is obvious that it is in our national interest to do the latter. What is more – and we are all well aware of this – our country is emerging from the crisis. To come out of the crisis with good growth rates, it needs to have a wider geographical environment that is moving towards growth. Unfortunately, in our southern and south-eastern environments there are the wars in Syria and Iraq, and the situation in Libya. We have the problems we have with Turkey. What is it that we need to take care of? We need to put the whole of Southeast Europe and the Balkans on a common growth course. And to do this, it is in our interest to resolve our problems rationally so that we can collaborate with these countries. JOURNALIST: Beyond that, there is another risk that has been pointed out by analysts, and it is the risk of Turkey’s penetrating the Balkans. What does this mean for Greece in practical terms, and how can it be averted? Can it still be averted? N. KOTZIAS: Greece always has to bear in mind that there are forces in Turkey – I’m not saying every Turkish government, every Turkish minister, but there are forces, the Turkish deep state – who would like to create what I call a ‘pincer’. In other words, for Greece to be caught between the East and its north and north-west, with the latter two under the influence and control of Turkey. In this direction, Turkey worked systematically to train the elite of these states, including their military elite; in other words, the mid-level and senior officers of these states. It also wanted to create bases. Not only in Albania – I remind you of the naval base in Durrës – but also in North Macedonia. Let’s say that, through our policy, we halted this momentum. It is in our interest for these countries to be oriented towards Europe and towards cooperation with us, rather than being oriented towards Turkey. Let me add what I am constantly being told, especially by the Albanians of the North Macedonia: that the danger is that, if we don’t resolve this problem in good time, the Albanians and other Muslims in North Macedonia will come more and more under the influence of fundamentalist Islamic currents that, through circles in Turkey – not official Turkey, I underscore – were trying to convert the latent Albanian nationalism into a fanatical Islamism, with serious implications for our region’s stability and security. It seems the critics – the people asking me why I am doing this now instead of pushing the issue through later on – want to ignore or forget all of this. There are major problems that could lead either to the destabilisation of the region, with serious repercussions, particularly for northern Greece, or to the region’s coming under Turkish influence, with major long-term problems for the country’s strategic position.JOURNALIST: Let’s look a little at developments here in Greece. How do you interpret the fact that when the discussions started between Greece and North Macedonia, as you rightly refer to it now – how do you interpret the fact that there were large demonstrations at the beginning of the negotiations, and now the gatherings don’t exceed 100 or 200 people? N. KOTZIAS: I think people are gradually coming to understand that this agreement will benefit Greece. I understand an argument that is both sentimental and highly charged, because it is an argument over identity; issues of identity. These same issues may not be the most important ones for the state, because the most important issues for the state are geostrategic and geopolitical issues. But each person is conscious of who they are, their role, their identity, their history, their heritage. There was an effort to create the impression that we were conceding everything, just as the new government in Skopje was accused of conceding everything. Gradually, people are coming to understand that our policy is what led to the renaming of the airport from ‘Alexander the Great’ to ‘Skopje International Airport’, the renaming of the motorway linking the Greek border with Skopje as ‘Friendship Motorway’. Our policy led to the statues and ancient Greek monuments being taken down in Skopje. And those that have not been taken down will be fitted with plaques saying they are expressions of friendship with Greece and its ancient civilization. They realised that the ‘Macedonian language’, which was recognised in 1977 by the conservative government, not to say by the Karamanlis government as early as 1958 [...] The agreement makes it very clear that it is a Slavic language, so this is a non-issue. JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, we can’t hear you. N. KOTZIAS: ... and people are gradually coming to understand that we are ending the irredentism, securing our borders, securing long-term cooperation. I always say that we have a certain ‘success’ in this region of the world – not just in Greece, but in this region of Europe – with names. Consider how many couples argue over what to name their daughter or son; whether they’ll take the name of one in-law or the other. And sometimes these couples end up getting divorced. The Greek people understand from their history and their interests that this is not something over which to get divorced. As a result, as all of the surveys every two weeks are showing more and more, gradually, I think: in other words, opposition to this agreement is going down by about 10% every two weeks. I think the agreement will have the support of the vast majority of the Greek people when it comes before Parliament. JOURNALIST: Do you believe the surveys that have been published? Because a number of players are using them to support their positions, like Mr. Tzitzikostas, who is asking for a referendum so we can find out what people really think. N. KOTZIAS: First of all, I think Mr. Tzitzikostas has a problem with what he himself believes, because he has changed his tune from what he said in the past. He wants to play the leader, either of New Democracy or of some far-right party and ‘northern league’. It is a matter of how a politician counting votes changes his stances at the drop of a hat. Second. This delusion that they will play with the Macedonia issue to the detriment of Greece’s long-term interests is combined with surveys that came out at the start of the negotiations, giving opponents to the agreement 85%, 87%. Current surveys carried out by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs show opposition at 55%-45%. In fact, the qualitative indicators show that the majority of people respect the work we have done on this issue. JOURNALIST: Let me ask you a personal question before we go to our first commercial break. You said recently that you have received death threats. In various forms. Was there any reaction of support from New Democracy or the opposition parties in general. Did they call you to express their support or anything? N. KOTZIAS: I think the first time this was made public – not by me, by the police, and there was a front-page photo of the bullets I received in the newspapers of the Marinakis conglomerate – they made positive statements supporting me and condemning these phenomena. But since these incidents have multiplied, they’ve stopped talking about them. And I would say that New Democracy – a large portion of it, not the majority – is the major contributor to the slander against me. Even in Parliament, they said some awful things, for which I will of course be taking them to court. JOURNALIST: Right. And one last thing. What exactly does this agreement mean for you? And I’m talking about on a political and personal level, because some people have even suggested that you are actually doing all of this to create your legacy, and various things like that. N. KOTZIAS: If it gives me a legacy, that means I was right to do it. (laughter) Listen, since I became Minister of Foreign Affairs I have had a motto – I have mottoes on various issues, but this one is with regard to fYROM – and this motto is that history should not be used as a prison, but as a school. In other words, history is not a prison, it is a school. I think I took a major step towards freeing the country from a past imprisoned by an issue that should not continue to be a cause for our inertia in the face of trends toward destabilisation in the region. I did my duty to my homeland. JOURNALIST: Mr. Kotzias, we are taking a first break for commercials and we’ll be back right afterwards to continue our conversation.BREAKJOURNALIST: We are continuing our very interesting discussion with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Kotzias, who we invited to talk about the whole range of foreign policy issues. Mr. Kotzias, are you on the line? N. KOTZIAS: I’m listening very carefully, as always. JOURNALIST: I want to go to another issue that appears to be opening up before us. Of course, you have been preparing this for a number of months now, but the opposition seems to be discovering it and rigging up new narratives. I’m talking about the matters under discussion with our neighbour Albania. You are coming in for criticism for discussing ‘Chameria’ issues, and at the same time it is being heard that the agreement with Albania will put ... N. KOTZIAS: I never discussed, never agreed to discuss and will never discuss ‘Chameria’ issues. The only government to have discussed such issues – and I have witnesses to the discussions that took place – was the New Democracy government in the 1990s. JOURNALIST: So the New Democracy government in the 1990s discussed ‘Chameria’ issues? N. KOTZIAS: Yes. JOURNALIST: Right. But it is also being said that, in the impending agreement you are discussing, the issue of the term ‘Northern Epirus’ will be raised. What is actually the case? N. KOTZIAS: No issue of the term ‘Northern Epirus’ is being raised, just as it is ridiculous that some people think Northern Epirus belongs to Greece. Because what they are accusing me of is bartering away Northern Epirus. In other words, we need to understand each other: Do we recognize the borders as formulated based on the Helsinki Final Act? Do we recognize the Paris final act of 1926? Do we recognize the results of the two World Wars? Do we recognize and want to support international law? Because I hear some people who are reminiscent of the worst versions of Turkish foreign policy, when it manifests an intention to revise borders, Treaties and conduct. These aren’t games. Some people are playing petty politicking games, and in New Democracy they are telling brazen lies, that we are supposedly exchanging ‘Chameria’ for Northern Epirus and so on. And it seems they are forgetting that what we call Northern Epirus today belongs to a sovereign and independent state and that we ... They need to tell us straight out: Do they want a change of borders? Do they want to go to war so we can change the borders? Do we want to become the worst version of Turkish foreign policy, or do we continue to believe in international law and to back and implement international agreements? These are serious issues, not games. The opposition has taken up these things and is playing with the country’s future. Because, as I said in Parliament, what was characteristic of New Democracy and, further back, Pasok, was that they used these issues to create rather than solve problems. JOURNALIST: The previous agreement on the EEZ was revoked by the Albanian Constitutional Court. N. KOTZIAS: And by Albania itself, yes. Because it was an agreement that wasn’t made in order to be implemented. JOURNALIST: And it stalled here, as well, let’s not forget. N. KOTZIAS: Here, for reasons no one has explained to me, New Democracy did not bring the agreement before Parliament, even though it considered the agreement a major success. I have heard the argument that it didn’t have time, because the government fell – in other words, in 2009, after a few months, it fell.If we assume this is true, and I don’t believe it, the question remains: in 2012, when New Democracy returned to power with Mr. Samaras, who follows this kind of thinking, why didn’t they ratify the agreement in the course of those two and a half years? They say, “because it was revoked by Albania’s Constitutional Court.” So we have to draw the following conclusion: either it was a mistake that they didn’t bring the agreement to Parliament for ratification in 2012, or they were right in bearing in mind the ruling of the Albanian Constitutional Court and they should have looked into how to pursue the issue. JOURNALIST: Today, what have we done differently as a country, in terms of foreign policy, to avoid the risk of such an agreement being revoked by our neighbour? N. KOTZIAS: Listen, the agreements that need to be made have to abide by certain principles. The first principle is that they be constructed in such a way that they can be implemented, and not in such a way that they can be celebrated but not implemented. In other words, the agreement can’t just be an empty suit, with me modelling the empty suit. In any case, I’m too big to model the suit! The second is that it cannot lead to revisionist processes. I remind you that, following WWI and the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was put under international control, especially in the regions where they produced coal at the time, under French control, and the reparations it had to pay were huge. In the 1920s Germany was forced to take two huge loans from America to pay of a portion of these debts, and when it could stand on its feet again, it move ahead to World War II. What happened? The bad agreement made Germany a revisionist power. When it was weak, it accepted the agreement. As soon as it started to recover its strength, it made revision of its primary goal. As a result, Nazism was able to come to power. So you have to do these two things in international agreements. The agreement we are making with North Macedonia and the one we are working on with Albania – and we’ll see when it’s ready – are agreements that have to stand the test of time. They have to resolve rather than create problems, as the two sides come to understand and accept them over time, with both sides winning from the agreement. They all need to remember that we didn’t go to war. We didn’t defeat Albania or North Macedonia on the field of battle yesterday. And as such we cannot dictate the terms of their surrender. What we want to do, in fact, is make agreements founded on international law; win-win agreements that stabilise our relations and the region. JOURNALIST: Right. Will the agreement you are discussing also end the state of war? And I’m asking because this perpetuation of the state of war, along with a number of other issues, is impacting thousands of people who are living in Greece right now. N. KOTZIAS: Look, when Italy conquered Albania, it made Albania part of the Italian monarchy. It was the so-called Italian-Albanian monarchy. It was called that in Albania, not in Italy. This monarchy – Italy and, by extension, Albania – declared war on Greece. As soon as the Italian monarchy, through Albania, declared war on Greece, Greece sequestrated the property of the Albanian state and Albanian citizens, including Albanian citizens of Greek descent. Fewer than 200 pieces of real estate. This sequestration is an assimilation putting foreign property under the supervision of the state, under the guarantee of the state, for as long as the state of war is in effect. Under normal conditions, there would have been a peace treaty that returned the property being sequestrated. But the Cold War did not allow this. There were friendship agreements between Greece and Albania. Greek governments – the people heckling us today – consented to Albania’s unconditional accession to NATO. And there was a Cabinet decision under Andreas Papandreou in the 1980s to the effect that the war is not ongoing. Unfortunately, through a number of actions on its part, Greece insisted, in the late 1990s, that the state of war is still in place. This government wants to do away with it. We have to end this. I want to make a clarification about this state of war, because it is ridiculous for us to be in a state of war with Albania, given the relations we have with this country, given that we are both in NATO, and so on. But I want to clarify the following: The real estate sequestrated is Albanian-owned property that came under the supervision of the Greek state due to the war; before the war started; on the day war was declared. This is completely different from so-called ‘Cham’ property. The ‘Cham’ property was seized by the Greek state at the end of World War II, and there are court rulings – legality, in other words – in this regard. The return of sequestrated property bears absolutely no relation to the court rulings on seizure of ‘Cham’ property from people who collaborated with the invaders, and this was the case throughout Europe in cases of people who collaborated with the invading force. JOURNALIST: And in fact – correct me if I’m wrong – there are court rulings on a European level regarding the latter cases. N. KOTZIAS: There are many, many court rulings, and they don’t come under the Court of Human Rights, because they are decisions from the end of the 1940s – and not from the mid-1950s – where Greek legislation is in force. JOURNALIST: Let’s go to the issue of the effect of the islands – not the influence, as a confused opposition politician put it recently – but on the issue ... N. KOTZIAS: When you have no knowledge of a subject and you get other people to write what you’re going to say, you get confused. JOURNALIST: Right. Have we won Greece’s having 100% effect for the islands? N. KOTZIAS: There is no winning or losing. We are in negotiations. I won’t tell you right now what we have done. But what I can tell you is that you have nothing to worry about. JOURNALIST: Fine, we won’t worry. Beyond that, for the extension of territorial waters in the Aegean, from what I understand, an agreement has been reached . In what way could ... N. KOTZIAS: There is no need for an agreement. Rights over territorial waters are autonomous rights of the Greek state, which of its own accord, whenever it wants, extends them wherever it wants, based on international law, which says territorial waters can be extended to up to 12 nautical miles. It doesn’t say, “12 miles” – this is important. It says, “up to 12 miles”. Today in Greek territory we are up to 6 nautical miles. What I want to say is, there is a big difference between the EEZ and territorial waters. The EEZ gives us rights. Territorial waters is sovereignty; Greece’s territory, its maritime territory, is being extended. JOURNALIST: Right. Now we’re going to change the subject again and go to issues concerning Turkey and the Cyprus problem. Have the negotiations on the Cyprus problem in Geneva and Crans Montana left a legacy? In other words, what results did these negotiations have for the Cyprus problem and Greek diplomacy? N. KOTZIAS: As you know, Greek diplomacy did not participate in any agreement on the internal constitution of Cyprus following the settlement of the Cyprus problem, because we believe that these are issues of internal policy and concern only the Cypriots, particularly given that we are arguing that there can be no demands of a colonial nature or demands that someone act as if Cyprus were a protectorate. This is why, in Geneva and Crans Montana, we ruled out and consciously fought against there being rights of intervention in Cyprus’s domestic affairs, which are Cypriot affairs. What the three guarantor powers (the United Kingdom, Turkey and Greece), based on the Treaties of Zurich and London, have the right to discuss are two small treaties of great importance; One is the Treaty of Guarantee, and the other is the Treaty of Alliance. Turkey invoked the former to carry out its illegal invasion of Cyprus and maintain its occupation. It invokes the latter to keep its forces in Cyprus. Both agreements must be revoked, but even before they are revoked, all of the illegal Turkish forces added to the 650 military personnel provided for in the Treaty of Alliance must be withdrawn. What we did for the first time, after 40 years, was to put the issue of guarantees and the illegal Turkish occupying forces back on the table and to have it accepted – even by the United Kingdom, in its own way, and by the UN – that we need to do away with these two treaties. Guterres, in my opinion a wise UN Secretary-General, stated, including during the negotiations in Crans Montana, that the Treaties of Guarantee and Alliance – the so-called ‘alliance’, that is – are outdated and that no one can demand they be implemented or pursue their being maintained. That is our major achievement. The real and essential problem of the Cyprus issue, from the perspective of the international players, of which Greece is one, is this issue that had nearly disappeared. The international community and the international players nearly forgot that the Cyprus problem is, first and foremost, a problem of occupation. This issue was re-tabled and cannot be taken off the table again. It is characteristic that the continuation of the negotiations – which we argue should begin whenever all sides agree – will have the abolition of the Treaties of Guarantee and so-called ‘Alliance’ on the table. JOURNALIST: When do you see a new round of negotiations being launched? N. KOTZIAS: First of all, the interested parties have to accept the new mediator appointed by the UN Secretary-General. For the time being, the Turks have not responded in the affirmative, but they haven’t formed a government yet. I assume they will first form a new government, the new Cabinet will be formed, they will exchange opinions, and then they will respond to the UN Secretary-General regarding his appointment of this representative. JOURNALIST: Is there room for any initiatives aimed at resolving Greek-Turkish disputes on a different basis from the one we have had to date for negotiating and discussing matters? N. KOTZIAS: Look, first of all let me say that, with regard to the Cyprus problem, we also thought it correct that, before we went to Geneva and Crans Montana, we should have an agreement with Turkey on the system of guarantees and the two treaties I have mentioned. In a discussion our Prime Minister had with Erdogan in Beijing, in a discussion we had, Erdogan agreed that we need to discuss these things. But subsequently this agreement was not implemented, and in the end, by the fault of Mr. Eide, we went to Crans Montana without having carried out substantial preparations on this major problem of the Cyprus issue. Now, before the elections in Turkey, we had a first round of consultations with the Turks on an approach that says we definitely need to have these discussions before we go to a new conference. I hope the new Turkish government – which, in terms of personnel, will be about the same as the old one I assume, though I don’t know – holds to this initial agreement of ours, following Crans Montana I mean. JOURNALIST: With regard to Turkey itself – the renewal of Erdogan’s term and powers, as well as his collaboration with a portion of the extreme right in in his country – do you think Turkey will take a harder stance against Greece? N. KOTZIAS: We'll see. We’ll see whether – thanks to the fact that Turkey’s government should be less fearful of coups, opponents, etc. – Turkey shows greater pragmatism and realism or whether it perpetuates a hard line that will make it difficult to find solutions and paths to real understanding. JOURNALIST: Let’s look a little at the initiatives Greece has undertaken on a regional level. Initiatives that concern the wider region of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Balkans. There are now regular meetings between the leaders of Greece, Cyprus and Israel. Following the institutionalization of this regular meeting, will we see similar collaboration with other countries; Palestine, for example? N. KOTZIAS: We have six eastern-looking trilateral cooperation schemes. These are with Egypt and Israel – the two most developed schemes. We have trilateral cooperation with Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan. The newest one is with Armenia, which was delayed due to political developments. As a result, what you see happening with Israel and Egypt will also happen with the other countries. In other words, there will be cooperation on all levels and in all the sectors where we can cooperate. We decided with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Palestine, at the meeting we had in Rhodes, to hold a meeting, in the autumn, of Ministers of Foreign Affairs and five other Ministers from each side so we can look at how to develop the cooperation between the two countries. And we have also seen the trilateral cooperation between Cyprus, Palestine and Greece. JOURNALIST: Right. That is a very interesting initiative. Beyond that, is there any thought of a quadrilateral meeting between Greece, Cyprus, Israel and Egypt? N. KOTZIAS: I don’t think Egypt would want to participate in such a platform at this time. I think it is very happy with the Greece-Cyprus-Egypt platform, which also ensures good access on European developments. JOURNALIST: And the Greece-Cyprus platform also functions as a bridge for wider cooperation in the region. N. KOTZIAS: That’s right. JOURNALIST: A final question: Where do Greek-American relations stand? We now have the Trump presidency halfway through its second year ... N. KOTZIAS: Look, President Trump didn’t focus on the region in the first year. This made things much easier for us, because there were no outside interventions on issues ranging from the Cyprus problem to the resolution of the Skopje issue. But I think that, in general, the Trump administration is more favourably disposed towards Greece than previous administrations. Regardless of whether or not one likes Trump, and regardless of what his foreign policy is, when it comes to Greece’s position in the region and when it comes to Greek-Turkish issues, I would say that it is a better relationship than I have seen previously. JOURNALIST: Right. Thank you very much, Mr. Kotzias, for this very interesting conversation; a detailed discussion, I would say. Because you answered our questions on a number of issues, and we needed those answers. Thank you very much for talking to us.N. KOTZIAS: Thank you and have a good day.


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Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Katrougalos meets with Lord Callanan, UK Minister of State for Exiting the European Union

A country leaving the European Union cannot have the same or greater rights than countries of the EU, Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Katrougalos stated following his meeting with Lord Callanan, the UK Minister of State for Exiting the European Union.We do not want this negotiation process to be punitive, Mr. Katrougalos added. Unfortunately, we have experience of asymmetrical negotiations.The full text of the Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs’ statement is as follows:“We talked about the United Kingdom’s new proposals. We welcome the White Book, the package of proposals submitted by the United Kingdom, and we believe it is very useful for us to be able to negotiate in unity, as 27 member states, towards our common goal: to find a viable solution for Brexit. What neither side wants is for there to be no agreement: a ‘no deal’ Brexit. We must avoid this at all costs.At tomorrow’s meeting of the General Affairs Council, I will have the opportunity to set out Greece’s longstanding positions: that we want the UK to remain a strategic partner of the EU. The UK is leaving the EU. It isn’t leaving Europe. This means that, in sectors such as security, justice and external threats, we should continue to have a special relationship. We do not want this negotiation process to be punitive. Unfortunately, we have experience of asymmetrical negotiations.On the other hand, it is obvious that a country that is leaving the European Union cannot have the same or greater rights than EU countries. The UK is a traditional friend of Greece, and we want to safeguard this relationship in the future. As in the past, our states and peoples will continue to be strategic partners.”


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Statement of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nikos Kotzias, on the 44th anniversary of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus

Forty-four years ago today, on 20 July 1974, Turkish military forces invaded Cyprus, seizing territory and dividing the island and its people in two. They left behind many victims and missing, as well as numerous violations of the most basic human rights. Thousands of Cypriots were forced to flee their homes and become refugees in their own country. The destructive mania of the invader also failed to respect religious and cultural heritage. Many Greek and Christian monuments suffered their barbarity. The Turkish Cypriots themselves were also victims of the Turkish invasion.Forty-four years later, Turkey continues, in Cyprus, to violate every notion of international law and to ignore the decisions of the United Nations. Cyprus, a member of the United Nations and the European Union, remains under the illegal military occupation of another member state of the United Nations.The key to a functional and viable solution to the Cyprus problem is to render the reunited state of Cyprus a normal modern state, to the benefit of the prosperity of all Cypriots. A state with full sovereignty, full independence and territorial integrity, free from foreign occupation forces, foreign dependencies and unilateral interventions of third countries in its internal affairs. These conditions are set out in the proposals the Secretary-General of the United Nations presented at the Conference on Cyprus, in Crans Montana, Switzerland. Constructive proposals that only Turkey and the Turkish Cypriot community objected to, persisting in their anachronistic and intransigent stances for keeping the Turkish military forces in Cyprus and maintaining Turkey’s unilateral ‘right’ to intervene in the internal affairs of Cyprus. We hope that the recent appointment of an envoy of the UN Secretary-General will give new impetus in the efforts to settle the Cyprus problem.Greece continues to stand supportively by the side of Cyprus, Cypriot Hellenism and the Cypriot people as a whole, with the goal of the island’s reunification into a sovereign and independent Cyprus state.


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Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Katrougalos attends meeting of EU General Affairs Council (Brussels, 20 July 2018)

Addressing the meeting of the EU General Affairs Council on Brexit, which was held in Brussels today, Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Katrougalos expressed our country’s full support for EU negotiator Michel Barnier, who will be carrying out a visit to Greece next week.Although the UK’s recent White Book is a positive step, Mr. Katrougalos added, it continues to be at some distance from European positions and the conditions of the negotiations, which creates serious risks of a ‘disorderly’, no-deal Brexit. This would be the worst possible outcome and must be avoided.Our country, Mr. Katrougalos concluded, is preparing for all scenarios, attaching special importance to the protection of the rights of the Greeks living in the UK, protection of agricultural products and geographical designations, and tourism, education and shipping issues.


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Greek Pastries Are on the Menu at the New Argentum Project

SoMa now has a new option for sweets and sandwiches. Greek eatery and market The Argentum Project is up and running at 47 6th Street, reports Hoodline, after a long time in the works. It serves breakf...


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4 Turkish Citizens Arrested for Crossing Illegally into GREECE

Greek police arrested four Turkish nationals for illegally crossing into Greek territory near the Evros River it emerged on Friday. The four, arrested on ...


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Cristiano Ronaldo leaves eye-watering £17850 tip at hotel in GREECE before completing £100m ...

Juventus' new £100m signing left an eye-watering £17,850 tip for staff at a luxury resort in GREECE after staying there with his young family recently, ...


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Russian Ambassador to GREECE Calls Diplomats' Expulsion 'Disappointing'

Russia's Ambassador to GREECE Andrey Maslov criticized the Greek government decision to expel two Russian diplomats and bar two others from ...


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EU renews financial support for windfarms in GREECE

EU Economic and Financial Affairs, Taxation and Customs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici noted that after GREECE exits its stability support ...


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Consortium signs sale agreement for GREECE'S DESFA

GREECE'S Environment and Energy George Stathakis, SNAM CEO Marco Alverà, Enagás Internacional CEO Marcelino Oreja Arburúa, Fluxys Chief ...


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Canadian National Rowing Team to Train in Ioannina, GREECE

The Canadian National Rowing team will be returning to Lake Pamvotida in Ioannina on August 24, to begin training for the Tokyo Olympic Games.


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GREECE-Russia ties shaken, Turkey pulls the strings

Relations between Athens and Moscow have deteriorated lately, following GREECE'S decision on 11 July to expel two Russian diplomats and ban the ...


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Once You Notice This About Mamma Mia, You Can't Unsee It

After realizing that "not ever leaving GREECE" was a viable option, these real and fictional Americans seized their chance to carve out their very own ...


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United Nations: GREECE dramatically improved position in e-governance

One apparent "silver lining" in the economic and political implosion that has ravaged GREECE since 20009-2010 is that e-governance has rapidly ...


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GREECE Called to Apply EU's New PNR Rules for Travelers

The European Commission on Thursday called on GREECE and 13 other EU member states to apply the new PNR (Passenger Name Record) rules, ...


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Experts decipher 2,000-year-old ancient Greek papyrus!

The papyrus contains an ancient medical text that describes


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MAE: EC decision to refer Romania to CJEU for not implementing anti-money laundering rules, standard procedure

The European Commission’s decision to refer Romania, alongside Greece and Ireland, to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) for failing to implement the 4th Anti-Money Laundering Directive into their national law is “standard procedure in cases where a member state does not notify the European institution in due time of the national […]


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EU to deploy border guards to FYROM to curb migration

The European Union has struck a deal with FYROM to deploy border guards at the south border of the Balkan country to curb migration. European Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos and Oliver Spasovski, Minister of Interior of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, signed a status agreement that will allow teams from the European Border and Coast … The post EU to deploy border guards to FYROM to curb migration appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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All day Greek cafe coming to Avondale Estates

A Greek cafe is expanding to DeKalb County. Kafenio, which opened its original location in 2015 in College Park, is set to open early next year in the Willis apartment complex at 2700 E. College Ave. ...


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Historic deal on shared Macedonian identity must be honoured

A big show of support for the agreement ending the dispute between Greece and the country now renamed North Macedonia The historic agreement of 17 June signed between Greece and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (Fyrom) ends a dispute that had been festering for the last 25 years (Report, 19 June). It defines the political, historical and cultural boundaries between classical Greek Macedonia and – as of now – North Macedonia, by making it clear Macedonian identity can be shared between people who endow it with different meanings. It respects the dignity and the right to self-determination of the two peoples and confirms the desire of both countries for peaceful coexistence. Each side has had to address the concerns of the other. For Greece, the geographical designation in the compound new name (North Macedonia), its application domestically and internationally, and the requirement that the constitution of Fyrom be amended accordingly. For North Macedonia, acceptance of the existence of a Macedonian language as part of the Slavic family of languages (a fact long recognised by the UN and Greece), the designation of the nationality as Macedonian/citizens of North Macedonia and, crucially, the promise of starting accession negotiations to Nato and the EU. Continue reading...


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5 mesmerizing Greek islands that American tourists don't know about

When Americans picture the Greek islands, the first images that come to mind are likely the white stucco buildings and deep blue waters of Santorini and Mykonos. Travel writer, Kastalia Medrano, is th...


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Showtime to Premiere JUST ANOTHER IMMIGRANT: ROMESH AT THE GREEK July 27

SHOWTIME will premiere the comedy special JUST ANOTHER IMMIGRANT: ROMESH AT THE GREEK, from comedian and star of the network's series JUST ANOTHER IMMIGRANT, Romesh Ranganathan, on Friday, July 27 at ...


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Greece in 10 audiobooks: a listener's literary guide

If you’re planning a summer vacation to Greece, the good news is it’s hard to get it wrong. From the stunning coastlines of Crete, to the lively festivals of Thessaloniki and the sacred sites of Delph...


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Who needs Greece? Why island-hopping in Scotland beats the Mediterranean

There are times when the scattered mosaic of islands off the west coast of Scotland performs conjuring tricks. It happens when the sun shines, mantles of mist and rain disappear, the hills are ablaze ...


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Giannis Antetokounmpo: From Greek Watch Seller to NBA 2K Coverstar

You might not know it looking at the NBA superstar now, but life wasn’t exactly easy for Giannis Antetokounmpo growing up. Born in 1994 to Nigerian parents, his family excitedly relocated from their h...


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Greek Turkish Cypriots mark partition anniversary

NICOSIA, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Greek and Turkish Cypriots marked on Friday the events 44 years ago that led to the partition of Cyprus, as they prepare for yet another go at negotiations for the reunifi...


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Passenger traffic in Greece up by 10.5% in first half of 2018

They amounted to 24.5 million passengers


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Feds: Greece man takes Uber to pick up gun from FedEx, gets arrested

Greece, N.Y. (WHAM) - Greece Police arrested a convicted felon on Saturday for trying to buy ammunition for a handgun that was shipped overnight to him from Texas. Anthony Alberti, 35, is also facing ...


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Merkel: “A proof of trust Greece is given several decades to recover”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that long period of primary surpluses was necessary fro Greece in order to reduce debt. She denied she had any deal with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to postpone Value Added Tax hikes in exchange for asylum seekers’ returns from Germany. At her annual summer press briefing on Friday, Merkel said … The post Merkel: “A proof of trust Greece is given several decades to recover” appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Turkish nationals arrested for illegally entering military zone in Ervos

Four Turkish nationals have been arrested and taken to prosecutor for illegally entering a forbidden military zone in the area of Evros in Northern Greece. According to their own information, two of them are journalists and two Turkish nationals who are legally in Greece as residents in Thessaloniki. The four were arrested on Thursday for … The post Turkish nationals arrested for illegally entering military zone in Ervos appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Cristiano Ronaldo Left An INSANE Tip While Vacationing At Greek Resort (PICS)

Cristiano Ronaldo took a pay cut when he transferred from Real Madrid to Juventus. But he’s still an incredibly rich man, and also a pretty generous one. Because he recently left an insanely generous ...


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Family missing after boat capsizes on the Evros River

A man has appealed to the Greek authorities not to stop the mission to find his wife and three children after their boat capsized on the Evros River on the border with the Turkey


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Turkish woman, children missing on Greece-Turkey border

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek police were searching on Friday for a Turkish woman and her three children missing after a boat carrying nine people capsized in the Evros river separating Greece from Turkey, ...


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Russian Foreign Ministry expresses strong protest to Greek ambassador

The ministry protests against the anti-Russian statements Greece has been making regarding the expulsion of two Russian diplomats and the entry ban another two Russian were issued


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Billy Joel Hits Up New Greek Hot Spot Kyma to Celebrate 100 MSG Shows

New Yorker critic Hannah Goldfield has weighed in on the finance crowd sensation that is the $180 wagyu katsu sando at Don Wagyu in FiDi. She seemed to like it, but in the end recommends the “quite de...


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Cristiano Ronaldo leaves tip worth £17,850 after stay at hotel in Greece

Cristiano Ronaldo left a £17,850 tip for staff at a Greek hotel before flying to Italy to complete his £99m transfer to Juventus. The Portuguese footballer was staying at the five-star Costa Navarino ...


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Middle-aged woman arrested for attacking babies in Athens Mall

Greek police has arrested a middle-aged woman who has repeatedly attacked babies in a Mall in Agios Dimitrios suburb of south Athens. The 55-year-old woman would approach mothers with babies and would hurt them by scratching their feet with either her nails or a sharp object. The woman was arrested after several parents had complaint … The post Middle-aged woman arrested for attacking babies in Athens Mall appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Protesters heckle Greek defence minister

Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos has been dogged by protesters during events he has attended in Cyprus as part of memorials to mark the 44th anniversary of the Turkish invasion. A number of arres...


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Bathers ‘Occupy’ Greek Public Beach by Building Umbrellas, Deck Chairs

Holiday makers at the Kammena Vourla seaside town in Central Greece set their own permanent sun umbrellas and sunbeds, occupying a public beach. According to LamiaReport, locals and tourists lodged a ...


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Russia summons Greek ambassador over Macedonia dispute

Russia's government has summoned the Greek ambassador to protest the expulsion of two Russian diplomats, as part of a dispute over Macedonia's plans to become a NATO member. The Russian Foreign Minist...


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