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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

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Minister of Foreign Affairs N. Dendias’ interview with Euronews TV channel and journalist Efi Koutsokosta (27.01.2021)

E. KOUTSOKOSTA: So, joining me now here in Brussels is the Greek Foreign Minister, Mr. Nikos Dendias. So, Minister, thank you very much for being with us.Ν. DENDIAS: Thank you for the opportunity. It’s a great pleasure.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: First of all, despite the calls from some member - states, including the Balkan states or Poland, the EU Foreign Minister decided to hold off from imposing new sanctions on Russian officials over the detention of Alexei Navalny. Do you agree with this approach? How should Europe treat Russia at this stage?Ν. DENDIAS: Well, we have agreed with the position of the huge majority of member - states as expressed by Josep Borrell that the EU should give a chance to Russia to reconsider. And in 30 days, we are going to discuss the issue again. That’s where we are.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Talking now about sanctions; the sanctions discussed for months over the illegal activities of Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean still remain on hold, despite the political decision of the EU Council in December. And we heard clearly the German Foreign Minister yesterday say that this new positive atmosphere that is indeed created by the Turkish side, shouldn’t be burdened by new sanctions. Do you think that this atmosphere created right now justifies this, taking sanctions off the table?N. DENDIAS: Well, if you allow me to say, sanctions yesterday were not on the table to be taken off the table. Of course, Heiko Maas said exactly what you said, but sanctions were not discussed yesterday, they were not in the agenda.What we were discussing is current affairs. And current affairs, as you very rightly said, was the description of the huge change of the Turkish policy. From the power of gunboat diplomacy to some sort of effort to persuade everybody that Turkey is becoming a normal interlocutor who is going to discuss with us on the basis of International Law. Well, let us wait and see what the Turks are going to do, but we can be hopeful.Yet again, that does not mean that the European Union does not hold sanctions as a potential reaction to Turkey breaking again International Law.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: So, you say that they are still on the table?N. DENDIAS: The European Union says that they are on the table and the European Union hopes that they will not be implemented. And the way for them not to be implemented is for Turkey to abide by International Law.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: And what is the message that you got from the contacts and the meetings you had with top officials here, especially with a view to the Summit of March, that would ease again in the agenda and of course the positive agenda that is back on the table?N. DENDIAS: Well, first of all, Greece has always been advocating the dual track approach and that was the position expressed by Prime Minister Mitsotakis over the various European Councils. And my discussions with Josep Borrell, with the Vice Presidents of the Commission, Mr. Dombrovskis, Margaritis Schinas, was in order for me to understand how they view this, how they view the situation, how we can best follow this dual track approach towards the March Summit.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Do you see a risk there that maybe Turkey takes what they want with this attitude of positiveness towards the EU and finally go back to what it was before?Ν. DENDIAS: Well, let us hope that President Erdoğan and my friend, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, see clearly where is the interest of the Turkish society. And I am one of the people who believe that the true interest of the Turkish society and of Turkey itself is good relations with the European Union. And maybe, who knows, sometime in the future they might become members of the European Union. But that means closer relations and full subscriptions to the European acquis.But please, allow me to remind that the European acquis consists also of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). So, Turkey has eventually to subscribe to that set of rules, which could lead to resolve our differences.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: And now, we are coming to the exploratory talks that resumed for the first time after five years. So, I would like to ask you, realistically speaking, what is your expectation from this process as it was described very positively from your counterparts in Europe as a very important step. So, what is your realistic expectation from this?Ν. DENDIAS: Well, I have to agree with you. Everybody is saying it is an important step, but please allow me to say it is not a big step. Exploratory talks are not negotiations. They are talks at the ambassadorial level, which try to define the terms of reference in order to have real negotiations. So that was the first meeting after five years.By the way, let us be frank, it was Turkey that stopped the meetings back in 2016, not Greece as Turkey thinks. But let’s go beyond that, the important thing is that they have resumed. Now, this was the first meeting, I understand it was just a ‘meet again’ meeting. We will see where we go from there. We have to be realists, but, also, we have to be optimists.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: But there are huge differences between the two sides, nothing has changed I guess - that’s what you said – so, what are your red lines in this process?N. DENDIAS: Well, let us not define an argument by red lines and let’s try to see the positive side of it. Turkey has decided after all that gunboat diplomacy leads to nothing. And they return to an effort to achieve an understanding with Greece, with Cyprus, with the European Union. I hold this as something extremely important and hope that we can build up on it, because that would be in the interest of both our societies, the interest of Europe, the interest of Turkey, the interest of Greece, the interest of Cyprus. So that’s the positive element.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: And in this context, you said that recently, last week, Greece extended its territorial waters towards the West, in Ionian Sea and of course, it is planning to do so also in the East. Do you still insist on that, despite of course the warnings, the renewed warnings of Turkey over a military action if so?N. DENDIAS: Well, I have to say that this was announced by Prime Minister Mitsotakis back on August 22. And extending the territorial waters of a country is its own right, a statement. Not a right that it has to negotiate with anybody else. So, this is a sovereign right of Greece and Greece will exercise it whenever the Greek government thinks it is an appropriate time. And also, apart from that, Greece is not going to negotiate on that basis with Turkey or for that matter with anybody else.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: So, there is no view to timeline that.N. DENDIAS: Well, even if there was one, I wouldn’t answer.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: So, looking now beyond our continent Europe, there is a new change in the United States with a new administration. So, we know that Erdoğan just lost one very good friend from the White House. Does this mean for you that now the new administration will be more favorable for Greece’s interests?N. DENDIAS: Well, we are not looking for favors from the new American administration. And speaking about the friendship between President Trump and President Erdoğan, I have to say that Greece had no problems at all with Secretary Pompeo; quite the opposite. Secretary Pompeo had a huge understanding of the problems in the region and whatever he has tried to do, I think was perceived very positively from the Greek side.And the new Biden administration - we know - also has a deep knowledge in the Balkans, a deep knowledge in Southeastern Europe and they know what is the situation on the ground. So, we are looking very much forward to working with them, not because - again, I am repeating myself - we are expecting favors from them, but because working with people that know the region, know the area, would be extremely helpful in resolving the existing differences.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Yes, we heard already, many officials and leaders say that they want to coordinate their foreign policy with the new administration in this new era of transatlantic relations. What does this mean for you?N. DENDIAS: Well, let us be frank. It is very important that the European Union and the United States are on the same page. After all, we believe in the same rules, in the same principles. So, it is very important that we come closer again and, whatever differences existed, we try to resolve those problems and move forward together. There is a deep understanding between the United States and the European Union and I have to say this is something on which we can build upon.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: And as we speak about these differences that Greece has with Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean, of course we are mainly focusing on the exploration of natural resources, and we have seen that Greece has made many agreements with several players in the region, including Israel, Egypt, etc. Does this mean that Greece can move on this without Turkey? Can Turkey be excluded finally from this process?N. DENDIAS: We don’t want to exclude Turkey from anything. This is absolutely wrong. Rather exactly the opposite. We want to involve Turkey in everything, but under a set of rules. And which are those rules? The rules of International Law. Greece would love to have a cordial, mutually beneficial relation with Turkey. I think that’s the way forward for Greece, that’s the way forward for Turkey, that’s the way forward for everybody.So, we are not trying to exclude Turkey, but Turkey has to understand that in order to become a member of a huge understanding of countries that see things in the same way, they have to abide by International Law.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: And a last question about another issue, very important for the European Union, which is the Western Balkans. So, are you worried from this new veto of Bulgaria on North Macedonia, that this could put actually at risk the agreement, the Prespa Agreement that has been decided some years ago? Do you think that this is something, that Greece has to do something to save, let’s say, the European future of the region?N. DENDIAS: Well, after the Thessaloniki Agenda, Greece is a firm believer of the European prospect of the Balkan Peninsula and of course of the Western Balkans as well. And in particular, now we are speaking about North Macedonia and Albania. And being a friend also to Bulgaria and of North Macedonia, we will try to facilitate the resolution of their differences in any way we can. We believe that we have a common future together, all the countries of the Balkans. And I am sure everybody will appreciate it.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Are you going to take any concrete initiative on that? To work as a mediator, for example?N. DENDIAS: Well, initiative maybe is a very strong word. We are friends with everybody and we are trying to be helpful towards everybody. But, again, I have to say we have to look at the big picture and the big picture is the future of the Balkans within the European Union.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Are you going to meet your Turkish counterpart, Mr. Çavuşoğlu any time soon?N. DENDIAS: As you know, I am a very good friend of Mevlüt and of course I am going to see him and I would like to see him. Now, I haven’t seen him for a while and that is not something good, but yet again, certainly not precondition, but let’s say, the environment has to be one that this meeting would create something helpful out of it, something positive. Just to meet for social reasons, no, that’s not any way forward.E. KOUTSOKOSTA: Okay, Minister, thank you very much for this interview.N. DENDIAS: Thank you.


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French Government Details Greek Rafale Order

Greece’s recent order for 18 Rafale fighters will comprise a mix of six new single and two seaters, while France’s order for 12 new Rafales—replacements for the secondhand ones it is selling to Greece ...


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Memories of Greece: Zorbas BBQ, Lasithi, Crete

While experiencing happiness, we have difficulty in being conscious of it. Only when the happiness is past, and we look back on it we do suddenly realize — sometimes with astonishment — how happy we had been.1 – Zorba the Greek. Traveling, before the 2020 Covid 19 Pandemic, to the Lasithi Plateau, east of Heraklion, Crete by […] The post Memories of Greece: Zorbas BBQ, Lasithi, Crete appeared first on Hellenic News of America.


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Conferment of Padma Shri Award to Greek National, Prof. Nicholas Kazanas

The Embassy of India has great pleasure to announce that Prof. Nicholas Kazanas, a Greek national and a distinguished Indologist, has been awarded the prestigious Padma Shri Award for his distinguished service and contribution towards enrichment of literature and education by the Hon’ble President of India on the occasion of 72nd Republic Day of India […] The post Conferment of Padma Shri Award to Greek National, Prof. Nicholas Kazanas appeared first on Hellenic News of America.


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858 new coronavirus cases worry Greece’s authorities, 32 more deaths

For second consecutive day new coronavirus cases exceeded 800, an increase that has health authorities worried. On Wednesday evening, announced have been 858 new cases and 32 deaths in 24 hours. The number of Covid-19 patients intubated in hospitals across the country has decreased further to 274. Death toll has reached 5,724 and the total … The post 858 new coronavirus cases worry Greece’s authorities, 32 more deaths appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Greece completes 10-year bond issue with record-low interest rate

Greece on Wednesday successfully completed a 10-year syndicated bond issue raising 3.5 billion euros from the market. The interest rate of the issue was set at 0.8 pct reflecting strong demand by institutional investors (bids exceeded 25 billion euros for the bond). Finance Minister Christos Sttaikouras, commenting on the results of the book-building process, said “ … The post Greece completes 10-year bond issue with record-low interest rate appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Futuristic home built into a Greek cliff looks like Bond villain lair

A FUTURISTIC home with the look of a Bond Villain’s lair has been built onto the side of cliffs. The eye-catching property – dubbed NCaved by its creator – sits by a secluded rocky cove on ...


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Greece Marks Holocaust Remembrance Day

Greek leaders marked Holocaust Remembrance Day, which observes the 76th anniversary of the liberation of the brutal extermination camp Auschwitz, on Wednesday. After laying a wreath on Athens’ Holocaust Memorial, Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou stressed that keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust, during which 6 million Jews were killed, is necessary in preventing further […] The post Greece Marks Holocaust Remembrance Day first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Nearly Half of Greece’s Coronavirus Cases Found in Attica

A total of 858 cases of the coronavirus were diagnosed in Greece on Wednesday, 16 more than the 842 cases that were recorded in the country one day earlier, on Tuesday. Alarming health officials, a great number of Wednesday’s 858 cases were diagnosed in Attica, where 409 Covid-19 diagnoses were recorded. Attica is home to […] The post Nearly Half of Greece’s Coronavirus Cases Found in Attica first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Greece 2040 Maps A Vision for Country’s Future

The “Greece 2040” forum, organized with the aim of mapping out the country’s future in the coming 20 years, kicked off with a presentation of the forum’s goals on Wednesday. The first official meeting of Greece 2040 will take place in October, where 14 organizations will outline their contributions to the nation’s future. Greek PM […] The post Greece 2040 Maps A Vision for Country’s Future first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Cookin’ with Carolyn Greek Spinach Casserole

Greek Spinach Casserole 2/3 …


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Greece taps bond markets achieving record-low yield

… • 1 min read ATHENS, Greece -- Greece has raised 3.5 billion … bond issue expected each quarter, Greece is planning to raise between … by the pandemic has pushed Greece back into a major … Bank, Morgan Stanley, Nomura, and Greece’s Eurobank managed Wednesday’s …


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Greece-China Year of Culture and Tourism 2021 to be inaugurated in May

ATHENS, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) -- The Greece-China Year of Culture and Tourism 2021 will be inaugurated this May, officials said in a written statement on Wednesday. Greek Culture and Sports Minis


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Nikos Dendias and Péter Szijjártó break down the EU's pending issues

EU Foreign Ministers met to discuss some of the bloc's most pressing issues on Monday. We talk to the Hungarian and Greek foreign ministers about potential sanctions on Russia, vaccines, Turkish relations and much more.


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Turkey-Greece talks held in 'very positive' atmosphere, Ankara says

Bilateral talks between Turkey and Greece, which resumed on Monday after a five-year hiatus in an effort to resolve long-standing maritime disputes, were held in a "very positive" atmosphere, Turkish ...


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Minister of Foreign Affairs Nikos Dendias’ interview in the Athens daily ‘Efimerida ton Sintakton’ with journalist Babis Agrolabos (23.01.2021)

JOURNALIST: Mr Dendias, a few days ago Parliament passed the law to expand our territorial waters in the Ionian Sea to 12 nautical miles. What does this act mean, and what is to come? N. DENDIAS: I consider it a great personal honour to have recommended, in the name of the Mitsotakis government, to Parliament the adoption of a law expanding the boundaries of Greece by at least 10,000 square kilometres — if taking the bay closing lines into account, then the expansion exceeds 13,000 square kilometres. However, let me underline that the adoption of this law is a collective act of historical significance, both in terms of its symbolism and in terms of the effective, positive footprint towards safeguarding our national rights. The boundaries of Greece are growing peacefully and through the application of International Law, with all that this entails. The government not only proclaimed that it would extend our territorial waters, but actually did it. For decades, Greece declared that it had this right and the prerogative to exercise it, but had not done so to date. The expansion is now a reality. As I have noted in the past, we have started the technical processes required to ensure that we are ready to expand our territorial waters in other parts of the country. We reserve the inalienable right to expand our territorial waters to 12 nautical miles at any place and at any time, when deemed expedient. At this point, I would like to underline the positive attitude of the overwhelming majority of the opposition parties which voted in favour of this bill, and the fact that no MP voted against it. I would also like to take the opportunity to once again express my gratitude to my colleagues in Parliament, as the bill was adopted in an atmosphere of national consensus, with virtually no quarrels and party politics for the most part, demonstrably proving that national unity can be achieved in light of the major security challenges facing our country. As the Prime Minister said, the framework of national consensus was broadened. JOURNALIST: Do you have a clear idea as to the process and framework for conducting exploratory talks with Turkey? Could their duration be indefinite, as was the case with the round of talks that was discontinued in 2016, or is a schedule also being discussed this time? What will happen if the Turkish delegation raises issues of demilitarisation of islands, changes to the limits of search and rescue responsibility in the Aegean Sea, grey zones or anything else it believes would serve its interests? N. DENDIAS: Almost five years have passed since the last round of exploratory talks, which ceased in March 2016 [with Turkey being at fault]. This is why, if I might use the expression, they have taken on a “mythical dimension”. I am a pragmatist by nature. Therefore, I would like to stress what the exploratory talks are not: they are not negotiations. The purpose of the talks is to explore points of convergence for possible future talks on a single issue. Moreover, these talks are informal. No minutes are kept and neither side will undertake obligations and commitments. Let me be clear: the issue to be discussed during any future negotiations will be the delimitation of the Exclusive Economic Zone and the continental shelf in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean, on the basis of International Law, and how this can be achieved. If no agreement is reached during any negotiations that might follow the exploratory talks, the two sides must agree on a special agreement text to be brought before the International Court of Justice in The Hague. I must also stress that the demilitarisation of islands will not be discussed at the exploratory talks. No issues concerning national sovereignty will be discussed. We will be attending these talks in good faith, with a constructive attitude and, most importantly, with no provocations. We do not wish to escalate matters; not will we try to undermine the exploratory talks in one way or another. On the contrary, it is our hope that these talks will lead to de-escalation, as the European Council underlined last December, when it referred to the “smooth continuation” of the exploratory talks. I hope that the Turkish side will also be attending these talks with a similar attitude. As regards the schedule, we should separate various theories and conjectures from undeniable facts. First of all, we are talking about relaunching the talks. Formally, they never ended, they were simply discontinued for a long period of time. Their periodic nature was never a given fact. Over the course of the two decades, more or less, since the first meeting, 60 rounds of talks took place, i.e. an average of three rounds per year. However, reality is completely different. There were no rounds during the last five years. There were over ten rounds in a single year. During other years, with different governments in Athens, we only had a single round per year. Therefore, we cannot extrapolate any solid predictions beforehand. As I stressed earlier, the only certitude is the positive approach of Athens, which we honestly hope will meet with a commensurate, positive approach on behalf of Ankara. JOURNALIST: When do you believe you will be meeting with Mr Çavuşoğlu? N. DENDIAS: As is well known, my Turkish counterpart and I share a long friendship, ever since we were both members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. We last met in Bratislava last October, at which time Mr Çavuşoğlu had promised that the Turkish side would be proposing dates for the exploratory talks. And instead it dispatched the ‘Oruc Reis’. The rest is history. However, this does not mean that the bridges of communication have been burned. Following the recent earthquake that hit Samos and Izmir, in particular, I called him and offered Greece's assistance to free survivors from rubble. A short while later, when I had to quarantine as a precaution, Mr Çavuşoğlu called me to inquire after my health. In any case, as to when the new bilateral meeting will be held, the answer is this:  when conditions permit and an appropriate atmosphere allowing such a meeting to be constructive is achieved. JOURNALIST: In the updating of the refugee agreement expected in March as part of the general discussion of EU-Turkey relations, are there additional provisions regarding Turkey's obligations so that we don't see the instrumentalisation of refugees on Greece's borders again? N. DENDIAS: With regard to this issue, which we are monitoring together with the competent Ministry of Migration and Asylum, I must clarify that there is no issue of updating or amending the joint EU-Turkey statement of March 2016. Such a discussion would stir up a hornet’s nest. The 2016 statement explicitly mentions three obligations that Turkey has undertaken and must perform: 1) to protect its borders in order to reduce illegal migration flows; 2) to not allow the creation of new migration routes; and 3) to accept returns. Unfortunately, Turkey is not performing any of these obligations to a satisfactory level. JOURNALIST: Let’s visit the other side of our neighbourhood. How is the accession process of Albania and North Macedonia faring after the threatened veto by the Bulgarian government in regard to the latter? Do you expect a new initiative by the Portuguese presidency? N. DENDIAS: Mr Agrolabos, please permit me a minor remark before answering your question. A few days ago marked the fortieth anniversary of a historic event for post-war Greece and, I would venture to say, for the country's history in general: our accession to what was the EEC at the time, thanks to the insight of Konstantinos Karamanlis. At the time, Greece was the only Balkan country to join this exclusive circle. Thenceforth, it was our moral obligation to actively contribute to the efforts of Western Balkan countries to accede to the European Union. Firstly, because this is in our interest. Their accession will solidify security, prosperity and stability in the region. Furthermore, it will prevent the rise of revisionist or extremist influences or efforts to revive empires, all of which belong in the past. This is why we are offering every assistance. We are demonstrably on the side of our neighbours. Furthermore, we are making efforts within the framework of the European Union in order to supply them with vaccines to combat COVID-19 as soon as possible. However, their accession will take place on the basis of the conditionality and individual performance of every candidate state. There are certain important criteria that both countries must meet. For instance, this includes the application of the Prespa Agreement. I discussed this issue extensively with my North Macedonian counterpart, Mr Osmani, just last week, stressing that even if work is achieved towards applying the name change, greater progress is required towards the implementation and consistent use of the name and the eradication of the “antiquisation programme”. I should further note, with respect to Albania, the position of our country and of the European Union regarding the correct approach to issues concerning the Greek minority. JOURNALIST: Do you expect that, under Joe Biden's new administration, the US will return to bridge the gap created in the Middle East and the Mediterranean in recent years? N. DENDIAS: I look forward to meeting my new US counterpart, Antony Blinken, in order to discuss the prospects for deepening our bilateral cooperation, including an upgrade to the mutual defence cooperation agreement (MDCA) and developments in the wider region. We look forward to the USA establishing a more active presence in the Eastern Mediterranean and expanding their strategic footprint our region. The form and time-frame of this presence remain to be clarified. What we further expect is for the new US government to place particular emphasis on cultivating transatlantic ties and cooperating with the European Union. JOURNALIST: You had stated that you cannot be optimistic with regard to the Cyprus issue in view of the informal talks at the quintilateral meeting, with Turkey openly declaring that it wishes for a solution involving two states that are equivalent in terms of politics and sovereignty. Can there be discussion when two diametrically opposite opinions are held? N. DENDIAS: There is a single framework for resolving the Cyprus issue, and it is known to all: a bizonal, bicommunual federation on the basis of the Resolutions of the UN Security Council that is compatible with the European acquis. In any event, informal talks at a quintilateral meeting convened by the UN Secretary General do not constitute official negotiations.


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1,500-Year-Old Greek Inscription Reading “Christ, Born of Mary” Found in Israel

Inscription reading “Christ, born of Mary” in Greek, discovered at et-Taiyiba in the Jezreel Valley. (Photo: Tzachi Lang/Israel Antiques Authority) Many precious artifacts of human history still lie ...


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UGA Greek Life holding spring recruitment

Greek Life at the University of Georgia is currently holding recruitment for students interested in joining a sorority or fraternity.


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A special event from a School like no other

The teachers from the worldwide Greek School The Greek Online School, recently received the amazing news that all their students who were Ellinomatheia Exams candidates managed to pass their exams with flying colors.  Students like sweet Benny, 9 years old, adult students like Danagra and Peter who have been with the School for many many […] The post A special event from a School like no other appeared first on Hellenic News of America.


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Greece’s President and Prime Minister honor Holocaust Remembrance Day

Greece’s President Katerina Sakellaropoulou and Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis marked the 76th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp on the Holocaust Remembrance Day. “The Holocaust is the most extreme manifestation of evil in human history and the most painful legacy of the twentieth century,” Sakellaropoulou said after she laid a wreath at … The post Greece’s President and Prime Minister honor Holocaust Remembrance Day appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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UPDATE 3-Greek 10-year bond issue attracts bids worth nearly $40 billion

Greece's new 10-year bond issue attracted bids worth nearly $40 billion on Wednesday, officials and bankers told Reuters, in a sign the country's debt is back in favour three years after it emerged ...


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Reuters: Strong demand for Greek & Austrian bonds

Austria received orders from investors amounting to 40 billion euros and Greece 25 billion euros for their new 10-year bonds


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Coronavirus Greece: At 858 new cases, 274 intubated, 32 deaths

1090 patients have been discharged from the ICU since the beginning of the pandemic


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Mikis Theodorakis Wrote the Most Beautiful Music on the Holocaust

Mikis Theodorakis, the Greek composer who is renowned around the world, is credited for writing the most beautiful music on the Holocaust. The “Mauthausen Trilogy,” also known as “The Ballad of Mauthausen” is a cycle of four arias with lyrics based on poems written by Greek poet Iakovos Kambanellis, a Mauthausen concentration camp survivor. The […] The post Mikis Theodorakis Wrote the Most Beautiful Music on the Holocaust first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Drug Abuse Surged Under Lockdown, Research Shows

Drug abuse has hit record highs in Greece’s Attica, home to the capital city of Athens, since the country’s first lockdown in March. Daily analysis of the region’s wastewater, conducted by a special research team at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, has shown an alarming spike in drug abuse, especially cocaine, and the […] The post Drug Abuse Surged Under Lockdown, Research Shows first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Ministry of Foreign Affairs announcement on International Holocaust Remembrance Day (27 January 2021)

International Holocaust Remembrance Day is a day of responsibility and contemplation for humanity, as well as a tribute to the millions of Jews who were the victims of a methodically organised atrocity that stands as one of the darkest pages in European history. Today, on the seventy sixth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau by the Allied Forces, Greece remembers the victims of the Holocaust, with tens of thousands of Greek Jews among them, who were persecuted and exterminated at the Nazi concentration camps. We grieve for our martyred fellow citizens and the virtual decimation of our country's historic Jewish communities. Greece honours the victims of the Shoah, the survivors of unthinkable atrocities, and the heroic, selfless contribution of all those who sheltered victims of merciless persecution by the Nazi racial madness. We all bear the duty of perpetuating the remembrance of these crimes as a barrier to any form of anti-Semitism. Since 2005, Greece has been a full member of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance and, having signed the Stockholm Declaration, is committed to keeping alive the memory of our fellow human beings who died in the Holocaust. This year marks the first Greek Presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance as concrete recognition of our country's role in the fight against anti-Semitism and the struggle to protect historical truth. Greece will continue the fight against racism, bigotry, intimidation and xenophobia, will continue honouring and protecting the memory of all those who perished, and is committed to working tirelessly to ensure that those who lost their lives will never be forgotten, so that humanity never again goes through such atrocities. At the same time, Greece unequivocally and systematically condemns any act that deliberately trivialises and denies the historical truth, as well as any act that desecrates the memory of the millions of victims of the Holocaust.


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Greek scientists say they’ve found complete petrified tree buried for 20 million years

Scientists in the Greek island of Lesbos say they have found a petrified tree that has remained intact under pyroclastic ash for 20 million years. The tree fossil was found during roadwork in an area ...


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20-million-year-old fossilised tree found in Greece

Greek scientists say they have found a rare fossilised tree whose branches and roots are still intact after 20 million years.


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Greek Sport Faces More Scrutiny

The spotlight put on Greek sailing by Olympic champion Sofia Bekatorou’s sexual abuse claims is helping to uncover more cases. A Greek sailing coach accused of raping an 11-year-old athlete was ...


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Greek Archaeologists Want Museums, Sites to Re-open Safely

The Association of Greek Archaeologists is calling on the government to re-open museums and sites with health protocols and free admission for the first month of operation.


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Greece plans to purchase a total of 40 fighter jets, says Defense Minister

Greece plans to purchase a total of 40 fighter jets, including the 18 recently agreed Rafale from France, Defense Minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos said late Tuesday. Speaking at the prime time news program of Alpha TV Panagiotopoulos said that the Greek national defense upgrade plan “is very ambitious and extends into the future.” “Sooner or later, … The post Greece plans to purchase a total of 40 fighter jets, says Defense Minister appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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First “horizontal” mass vaccination of small islands population started in Kastellorizo

Covid-19 vaccination of inhabitants on the small islands of the South Aegean started from Kastellorizo on Wednesday morning. It is the first nationwide “horizontal” mass vaccination of the entire population of the island, regardless of age and professional category. Teams from the General Hospital of Rhodes arrived on the island and will inoculate the inhabitants … The post First “horizontal” mass vaccination of small islands population started in Kastellorizo appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Japan's Shinji Kagawa moves to Greek side PAOK

Thessaloniki: Former Manchester United midfielder Shinji Kagawa has signed for PAOK Thessaloniki in an 18-month deal, the Greek Super League club announced on Wednesday.


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Greek Hotels Work With RES Center for Greener Future

The Hellenic Chamber of Hotels and the Center for Renewable Energy Sources (CRES) have signed a memorandum aiming to tap into renewable energy technologies.


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Al Quaeda terrorist susepct in Greece extradited to the Netherlands

The suspect reportedly committed crimes in 2013 and 2017 in Syria


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Blindness Doesn’t Keep Greek Cypriot Boy From Soccer Dreams

Blindness can’t stop 10-year-old Greek Cypriot Mikey Poulli, who lives in London, from pursuing his dreams of playing soccer professionally. After his parents took him for a routine eye exam when he ...


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Japan midfielder Kagawa signs for Greek club PAOK

Former Manchester United midfielder Shinji Kagawa signed with Greek club PAOK Thessaloniki on Wednesday. The club, which won the Greek title in 2019 for the ...


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Ex-Manchester United star Kagawa moves to Greek side PAOK

Former Manchester United midfielder Shinji Kagawa has signed for PAOK Thessaloniki in an 18-month deal, the Greek Super League club announced on Wednesday. PAOK did not reveal any financial details of ...


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UPDATE 1-Strong demand for Austrian, Greek bond sales

Austria, Greece selling 10-year, Slovenia 60-year bond * Bonds subdued after Italy rally on Monday, Tuesday * ECB still has room to cut deposit rate - Knot (Adds details, update ...


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Top 10 books about children fending for themselves

Facing up to the world without adult support is present in Greek myths and remains a key theme in authors from Anna Burns to Douglas Stuart and Rachel Kushner Over the past few years, I’ve been preoccupied with stories of children fending for themselves, raising each other, embodying cultural and familial values when the adults in their lives cannot. It is there in the Greek myths: the child Iphigenia offering herself as a sacrifice in the face of her father and a mob baying for her blood, or Antigone covering her brother’s body with dust, enacting the burial rituals demanded by the gods when those around her are blinded by revenge or fear. It persists in contemporary stories of children’s resistance, survival and empathy in the midst of addiction, abuse, war. These children, I realise, are constructs, symbols of what we have sacrificed, our effort to compensate for what we lost or are in the process of losing. At the start of my novel, A Crooked Tree_,_ the 15-year-old narrator’s younger sister is put out of the car on a dark road. The other children look back and know that something terrible will happen; when it does, they will try to shoulder the burden alone. I found myself returning to this idea, the solidarity of youth, how children shield adults and each other without fully grasping the external forces threatening them. Continue reading...


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Demand for Greece's new 10-year bond

ATHENS- Demand for a new 10-year bond Greece issued on Wednesday has exceeded 22 billion euros a few hours after books opened for the sale, the country's debt agency said. Updated pricing guidance was ...


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Former Manchester United midfielder Shinji Kagawa joins Greek side PAOK for free

Former Manchester United superstar Shinji Kagawa has joined Greek outfit PAOK Thesalonikki after spending the last few months without a club as a free agent.


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Soccer: Ex-Japan international Shinji Kagawa joins Greek club PAOK

Former Japan international midfielder Shinji Kagawa has joined PAOK, the Greek Super League club announced Wednesday.


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GREEK-American diaspora writing its own history, before it's too late

GREEK Americans celebrate in Astoria after Greece pulled off one of the biggest shocks in soccer history, beating Portugal in the Euro 2004 final.


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Panagiotopoulos: The defense upgrade plan is “very ambitious and extends into the future”

In a few days, the first GREEK F-16 Viper will fly to America. In the next seven years, we will be developing between 8 to 12 F-16s into Vipers per year.”.


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Tourism ministers of Greece and Serbia agree on “vaccination certificate” requirement

Tourism ministers of Greece and Serbia signed a memorandum of cooperation regarding a vaccination certificate during the tourism season from May 1 to October 1. Greek Tourism Minister Harry Theoharis and his Serbian counterpart Tatjana Matic signed a memorandum of cooperation, addressing entry requirements for both countries’ citizens. Serbian citizens visiting Greece must carry a … The post Tourism ministers of Greece and Serbia agree on “vaccination certificate” requirement appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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7:10 Greek women say they have been victim of sexual harassment or abuse

Seven out of ten Greek women have been victim of sexual harassment or abuse and the overwhelming majority believes that it is not easy for the victim to find justice, a nationwide survey has found. According to the survey conducted by Prorata between January 22-24 in a sample of 1,115 people, 65% of women said … The post 7:10 Greek women say they have been victim of sexual harassment or abuse appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.


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Intact mask of Greek god Dionysus found in Turkey

It was unearthed in the ancient city of Daskyleion in western Turkey


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Greek Lawyer Elected Judge to the European Court of Human Rights

Greek lawyer Ioannis Ktistakis, an Associated Professor of Law at Democritus University in Thrace, was elected Tuesday as judge to the European Court of Human Rights. He was elected by the Council’s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE). An announcement by PACE reads: “Mr Ktistakis, having obtained an absolute majority of votes cast, is elected judge of the […] The post Greek Lawyer Elected Judge to the European Court of Human Rights first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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Greece Eyes US F-35 Jets After French Rafale

Greece is eying to buy the state-of-the-art F-35 fighter aircraft from the US, the defense minister revealed on Tuesday. Speaking after Greece and France signed the agreement to buy 18 Rafale fighters, minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos said that “sooner or later, a purchase of F-35s will be discussed.” “At some point we will move to fifth-generation […] The post Greece Eyes US F-35 Jets After French Rafale first appeared on Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.


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