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  • Father of Greek-American Texas shooter claims son was bullied (video)

    By News Room™ → May 22, 2018

    The father of the Greek-American Texas shooter has claimed his son Dimitrios Pagourtzis was bullied and this may have led him to open fire on an art class in his Houston-area high school on Friday, killing 10 people.

    Speaking to Greece’s Alpha TV on Sunday, Antonios Pagourtzis, said his son was a victim of bullying on a daily basis and often in front of his girlfriend, who was also among the victims.

    “He was taunted, beaten and bullied, probably by many pupils,” Pagourtzis said.

    Antonios Pagourtzis, who emigrated from Greece to the United States in his mid-twenties, claimed that Dimitrios may have snapped following constant bullying.

    “My boy is not a man, he is a child. We cannot blame everything on the child, others are also responsible,” he said.

    Pagourtzis revealed that he had seen a change in his son’s behavior in the two weeks before the shootings and he decided to skip work and be with Dimitrios.

    According to new accounts by students who survived the shooting spree at the high school, the 17-year-old chillingly sang “Another one bites the dust” as he fired away with his father’s Remington 870 shotgun and .38-caliber handgun.

    “He also kept playing a kamikaze song over and over as loud as he could,” on his cellphone Kole Dixon, 16, told The New York Post.

    County officials revealed that Pagourtzis exchanged “a lot of firepower” with authorities before surrendering. Despite the gun battle, Pagourtzis collapsed on purpose while giving himself up, so he would not be shot by arresting officers.

    Video in Greek

  • National Hellenic Museum Gala Raises Funds to Digitize Greek American History (video)

    By News Room™ →

    According to Greekreporter.com, the National Hellenic Museum (NHM) has brought the curtain down on its biggest and best Annual Gala yet — a top-notch evening of music, entertainment and culture held in Chicago.

    The NHM Gala is also an opportunity for hundreds of Greek Americans and friends from across the U.S. to gather for a night of festivities and philanthropy.

    Speaking to Greek Reporter was Dr. Calamos Nasir, president of the Hellenic Museum, who said their collections reflected some of the “hard, deep” stories of Greek immigrants’ lives in the U.S.

    “We are the largest collection in the world for Greek-American stories,” she said.

    National Hellenic Museum President Dr. Laura Calamos Nasir with Museum Chairman John Calamos Sr. (center) plus museum trustees and benefactors.
    Explaining how the museum was in a unique position to reach across different regional groups — from Crete to the Ionian islands — the NHM could also bring together Church records and all kinds of other oral histories from Greek communities.

    “Going, forward our plan is to digitize that in such a way that you can search through the website to find that information,” Nasir added.

    Saturday’s event at the Chicago Marriott Downtown Magnificent Mile was MCed by WGN-TV’s Emmy Award-winning entertainment reporter and critic Dean Richards.

    Among the musical treats for the hundreds of attendees were the sounds of the Chris Sarlas Orchestra featuring George Dimas and Voula Karahaliou.

    Also playing was The Levendes featuring Nikos Koutras, who treated gala-goers with traditional and contemporary Greek music amid a repertoire of dimotika, nisiotika, rebetika, and modern laika.
    Philanthropic support from NHM Gala will benefit the tens of thousands of people — children and adults — who visit the National Hellenic Museum every year through field trips, tours and dynamic cultural and historical programs.

  • IMF calls for an agreement on Greece’s debt by next week - Poul Thompsen on CNBC

    By NewsRoom™ → May 15, 2018


    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) needs to reach an agreement with Greece and its European creditors by next week to ensure that the fund has enough time to give money to the embattled nation.

    Speaking to CNBC Tuesday, Poul Thomsen, the IMF director for Europe, said that there needs to be an agreement at a meeting late next week.

     “We really need an agreement at the Eurogroup next week,” Thomsen told CNBC’s  Joumanna Bercetche.
    “Time is running out,” he said, “but if there is an agreement in the Eurogroup meeting in May, then there will be enough time for us to activate the program and for it to coincide with the remainder of the ESM (European Stability Mechanism) program.”

    Greece has been seeking debt relief — a relaxation of the terms for paying back its debts — since 2015, but the issue has dragged on due to opposition from several EU member states. Certain European countries, some of which are the largest lenders to Greece, are against significant debt forgiveness as they don’t want to be seen by their citizens as ongoing contributors to what they see as economic malpractices in their southern European neighbor.



    Will be time to activate debt-relief plan for Greece: IMF from CNBC.

    As we read in "Keep Talking Greece", the Eurogroup is a regular meeting for all the finance ministers from those countries that share the single currency, while the ESM is the organization that deals with bailing out struggling nations in the region.

    So far, all the money that Greece has received under its third bailout program has come from Europe and it’s still waiting for a slice from the Washington, D.C.-based IMF. The IMF has said that it will not disburse any funds until Europe agrees on specific measures that will make Greek debt more sustainable over the long term. Greece has a debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) of 180 percent.
    However, the debt issue becomes even more pressing as Athens approaches the end of the financial program, scheduled for August 20.
    Between an agreement on debt and the end of the bailout, the IMF has said it would be available to disburse 1.6 billion euros ($1.9 billion). CNBC
  • Case of Greece’s ex-ELSTAT Chief Goes Back to Court

    By NewsRoom™ →


    The case of former head of the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT) Andreas Georgiou over misrepresentation of Greek financial data will be up for review by the Appeals Council for a third time, following a Supreme Court decision on Monday.

    The Appeals Court has twice so far acquitted him of charges that he misrepresented Greek fiscal data of 2009 in order to help the then government bring the country under bailout agreements.

    Included in his file is a Eurostat document verifying that Greek data he submitted followed the correct terms and conditions set out by the EU agency.

    In the second review of the council, Georgiou was acquitted of giving false testimony, a crime in Greece. On Monday, the Supreme Court decided to accept a proposal by its prosecutor Xeni Dimitriou to revoke that acquittal.

    The case of Georgiou, whose tenure at ELSTAT ran from 2010 to 2015, will now have to be reviewed by the Appeals Court again.
  • Two Women Arrested in Relation to Dead Newborn Found in Garbage Bin

    By NewsRoom™ → May 14, 2018



    ATHENS – A 19-year old girl and her 54-year old mother were arrested on Sunday in connection with the dead infant found dead in a garbage bin in Petroupoli, an outlying northwestern suburb of Athens, in February.

    The infant was found in the rubbish, wrapped in a plastic bag, on February 26, 2018.

    According to "The National Herald", the 19-year-old confessed that she was the baby’s mother and that she didn’t want to keep the child, so with her mother’s help they strangled the newborn and threw it into the garbage.
  • Home of State Minister Flambouraris Targeted on Sunday

    By NewsRoom™ →



    ATHENS – The home of Minister of State Alekos Flambouraris on Strefi Hill in Athens was once again the target of a fire bomb attack in the early hours of Sunday morning, at 4:30.

    According to "The National Herald", a group of youths attacked a police platoon permanently stationed outside the minister’s house, which the minister no longer occupies. They threw stones, bottles and fire bombs at police, causing damage to three parked cars, before running away.

    Half an hour later, there was another attack by youths against a riot police platoon stationed outside the offices of the PASOK party on Harilaou Trikoupi street, which did not result in injuries or damage. No arrests were made.
  • Greece and FYROM Seek to Reconcile Name Dispute in Skopje

    By NewsRoom™ → May 13, 2018



    Greece’s Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias and his Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) counterpart Nikola Dimitrov will meet on Saturday with UN mediator Matthew Nimetz as talks for a resolution to the name dispute drag on.

    The meeting follows Friday’s gathering of Balkan and Central European ministers in Athens.

    The foreign ministers of Albania, FYROM, Montenegro, and Serbia, all of them hoping to join the EU, were invited as observers along with colleagues from EU members Slovenia and Cyprus.

    It is thought that Greece and FYROM need to find a new name for the Former Yugoslav Republic which will be used both at home and abroad, something which would require changes to its constitution.

    The two sides are reportedly trying to buy more time for Skopje to be the location for the proposed change, despite opposition calls for it to be put to a public referendum.

    It had been hoped earlier this year that FYROM would be accepted into NATO and the EU soon after the name dispute with Greece was settled. However, despite initial signs of progress, including meetings between the two states’ premiers, talks seem to have stagnated in recent months.
  • Juncker Asks for Greater Solidarity with Italy, Greece on Migration

    By NewsRoom™ →



    BRUSSELS (ANA/M. Spinthourakis)— European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker asked member-states on Friday to show greater solidarity with Greece and Italy in their efforts to deal with the repercussions of the refugee and migration crisis, during a speech at the ‘State of the Union 2018’ conference in Florence.

    As we read in "The National Herald", Juncker acknowledged that solidarity cannot built in a day and has to develop over time but underlined that crises weaken the EU and lead to a rise in populism and nationalism.

    Solidarity should not be confined to migration issues but should also apply in the economy, added Juncker, citing the example of the economic support for countries undergoing structural economic reforms and the reserve funds in the European budget for coping with emergencies and delicate situations. Another exampe of such solidarity, Juncker said, was the doubling of the funds for Erasmus programme.

    Finally, referring to EU’s weakenesses, Juncker supported the abolition of unanimity in the decision-making processes that refer to foreign and tax policy.
  • Appeals Court Finds Former Minister Mantelis Guilty of Money Laundering

    By NewsRoom™ →



    ATHENS – An Appeals Court on Friday returned a guilty verdict for former transport minister Tassos Mantelis and his co-defendants in a Siemens’ kickback case.

    The appeals court found him guilty by four votes to one on the charges of money laundering. According to the indictment, Mantelis accepted bribes totalling 450,000 German marks (230,000 euros) from the German company in 1998 and 2000, which were deposited in a Swiss bank account under the name Rocos. The cash, according to the judges, was a gift for awarding the German company the contract for digitising the centres of the state-run telecoms company, Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation (OTE).

    Ilias Georgiou, a former Siemens Hellas executive, and Mantelis’ associate Aristidis Mantas were also found guilty.

    As we read in "The National Herald", the appeals court hearing will now continue by examining possible mitigating circumstances that may lead to a reduction of the eight-year prison sentence imposed by a lower-level court. His defence lawyers have asked the court to also take into account their client’s “genuine contrition” and the fact that he has returned the entire sum that he supposedly received to the Greek state.

    The court’s sentence will be announced once this stage of the trial is completed. Depending on its decision – and especially if the original sentence is not reduced – the now 73-year-old Mantelis may face the possibility of prison.
  • Holy Synod Criticizes New Law Allowing Same-Sex Couples to Become Foster Parents

    By NewsRoom™ → May 12, 2018



    The new law that allows same-sex couples to become foster parents denies certain children the right to grow in a normal family environment,” the Holy Synod of the Greek Church said on Thursday, criticizing the government for introducing the law.

    The Holy Synod “is once again registering its strong opposition to the state’s choice to deny certain children the right to develop in a natural family environment with model father and mother figures. (…) Unfortunately, ‘political correctness’ won against the natural order of things and the child’s interests,” it said.

    According to "The National Herald", the draft law, introduced by the Labor Ministry and passed by Parliament on Thursday, allows the fostering of children by couples of the same sex who have signed a civil partnership agreement. It does not allow same-sex couples to adopt.
  • Stress Tests Results Credit Positive for Greek Banks: Moody’s

    By NewsRoom™ →



    The results of a stress test round for the four Greek systemic banks – Alpha Bank, Eurobank, National Bank and Piraeus Bank – are credit positive and showed the resilience of their supervisory capital, Moody’s said in its Credit Outlook report released on Thursday.

    “The results of the stress tests are credit positive for the four banks since they will not need to raise new capital, something that will offer them time to focus on reducing their high stock of non-performing exposures (NPEs), which is their most significant credit challenge,” the credit rating firm said.

    “Following the successful completion of the stress test, we believe that the banks’ managements will focus more on the strategic plans to deal with NPEs and achieving their goals to reduce NPEs as committed with the European Central Bank,” Moody’s said.

    According to "The National Herald", Greek banks plan to reduce their NPEs to around 65 billion euros by the end of 2019 from around 96 billion in the end of 2017, or 49 pct of loans. Moody’s said that a significant part of the banks’ capital base included deferred tax assets (DTAs), a majority of which (around 16 billion euros) are eligible to be transformed into tax credits to be paid by the Greek state if banks record annual losses in the future. DTAs are assets based on the funding ability of the Greek state “which has a relatively weak credit position. These assets accounted for around 55 pct of CET1 of the four biggest banks in December 2017, undermining the quality of their capital and their ability to absorb losses,” Moody’s said.
  • Ministers from Central Europe, Balkans Meet in Greece

    By NewsRoom™ →



    The foreign ministers of eight central European and Balkan EU countries meeting in Greece have called for a more democratic and socially-just Europe.

    Friday’s meetings in Sounio, south of Athens, bring together ministers from the Visegrad Group — Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary — plus Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia.

    The foreign ministers of Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia, all of them hoping to join the EU, have been invited as observers along with colleagues from EU members Slovenia and Cyprus.

    As we read in the "GREEK REPORTER", Greece’s Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias stressed the need to work on a new justification for the EU, providing a vision and reforming its institutional systems.

    The EU’s goal, he said, must be “to better serve its citizens and empower the EU in a changing world,” focusing on people and the environment.

    “We want a more united EU, which is more democratic and socially just. An EU that is stronger in the world and cares for its citizens,” he said.

    Ministers agreed on the importance of safeguarding the social state and the handling of the migration issue, as well as the changes that must be made to the Dublin Treaty.
  • Charles and Camilla Visit Ancient Knossos in Crete (photos)

    By NewsRoom™ →



    The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall have visited the ancient site of Knossos in Crete on the final day of their tour of Greece on Friday.

    The couple were at the site for approximately 50 minutes, during which they were given a guided tour and presented with gifts. Despite the extremely tight security measures, the site remained open to the public, who were able to watch the royal couple.

    The palace of Knossos eventually became the ceremonial and political centre of the Minoan civilization and culture.

    As we read in the "GREEK REPORTER", the duchess will then meet a group of school children learning about Minoan Crete while the prince will join a “Cooking like Minoans” event.

    After visiting the site, Camilla will visit Lyrarakis winery where she will receive a tour of the vineyard and wine cellar.

    She will then rejoin with her husband to go to the Heraklion Development Agency where the prince will meet staff working on the refugee project before both meet members of the community and refugees.

    Before departing for the UK, the couple will attend an engagement which will celebrate local produce, culture and heritage.

    Charles and Camilla will walk around a Cretan village to meet locals before touring stalls selling Cretan produce, crafts and local initiatives.






  • Father Alex and Presbytera Xanthi Karloutsos to be recipients of 2018 Athenagoras Human Rights Award

    By NewsRoom™ → May 11, 2018



    Father Alexander and Presbytera Xanthi Karloutsos will be honored as the 2018 recipients of the Athenagoras Human Rights Award. The Award will be presented by the Order of Saint Andrew, Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, at the organization's annual banquet Saturday, Oct. 27, 2018 at the New York Hilton Hotel.

    The Award, established in 1986, is presented annually to a person or organization that has consistently exemplified by action, purpose and dedication concern for the basic rights and religious freedom of all people. It is named in memory of Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras, who reigned on the Ecumenical Throne from 1948 until his death in 1972. Prior to his election as Ecumenical Patriarch, he was the second Archbishop of North and South America.

    Past recipients of the Award have included Presidents Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush, Mother Teresa, Elie Wiesel, Mikhail Gorbachev, Admiral James Stavridis, Vice President Joe Biden and last year's recipient, Emilia Kamvisi and Efstratios Valamios, representing the fishermen of Lesbos and the Greek Islands.

    Father Alexander and Presbytera Xanthi have been a true partnership and team well-known throughout the Archdiocese and the Orthodox World. Their advocacy on behalf of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is legendary.

    Fr. Alexander (better known as Father Alex) has been an assistant to three Archbishops. Currently he is the spiritual adviser to the Order of Saint Andrew, Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in America, and to Faith: An Endowment for Orthodoxy and Hellenism. He serves as special assistant to the Archbishop working as liaison with heads of churches, the White House, the Congress, state and local officials, Greek American organizations, political action and religious freedom and human rights groups. He is also the Orthodox chaplain for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Together with his son-in-law, Father Constantine Lazarakis, he pastors the Dormition of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church of the Hamptons.

    Father Alex previously served as the executive director of Leadership 100, (1986 to 1992 and 1999 to 2004), and was appointed by Archbishop Iakovos as the first vicar of public affairs of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America in 1985, holding that position simultaneously until 1992 when he was appointed special assistant to His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.

    He graduated magna cum laude from Hellenic College in Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1966. He received a Master of Theology degree, also magna cum laude, from the Holy Cross School of Theology there in 1969. He received a Certificate in Ecumenical Theology from the University of Geneva in 1970. He was ordained a deacon and a priest in September of 1970; respectively by Archbishop Eugenios of Crete and Archbishop Iakovos of America and was elevated by Archbishop Iakovos to Protopresbyter in February of 1984. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew named Father Alexander Protopresbyter of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 1994, the highest honor a married clergyman can receive in the Orthodox Christian Church.

    Father Alexander first served as an assistant priest at SS. Constantine and Helen in Chicago in 1970 where he was active in youth ministries. He was appointed Archdiocesan Director of Youth Ministry in 1974, moving to the Archdiocesan headquarters in New York. In 1978, he was appointed Archdiocesan Director of the Office of Church and Society where he served until 1980 when he assumed the directorship of the newly established Department of Communications.

    Presbytera Xanthi Karavellas Karloutsos, who has more than 46 years in community service with young and old alike, presently serves the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America as executive assistant and coordinator of the Offices of Public Affairs, Faith Endowment and as Office Manager for the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle, Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

    Born in Corfu, Greece, she was raised in Washington, D.C. During her high school years, her parents developed a cardiac care and surgery program with the National Institute of Health for children from Greece in need of heart surgery and health care. Upon completion of her high school studies at Montgomery Blair High she studied interior design at the International School of Interior Design. In 1970, she began her career as a Presbytera in the Greek Orthodox Church. Four years after serving the Parish of SS. Constantine and Helen in Chicago, she and her husband moved to New York City to serve the Archdiocese there.

    In 1974, she was appointed as adviser to the Archbishop's Youth Ministry Office with an acute interest for children with special needs and troubled youth. When her children began attending the Public Schools of Pelham, New York, she devoted her time and talents becoming an active advocate for children's educational needs by serving two respective terms on the local PTA as co-president of both Pelham's elementary and high schools.

    In 1989 she accepted the position of director of the Hellenic American National Action Committee Social Services in the Bronx, where she became involved and exposed to the greater community's less fortunate families and the struggle for disadvantaged children and their parents. Along with her husband, from 1992-1996, they served as personal assistants to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew. While Father Alexander served as public affairs officer, Xanthi immersed herself in the needs and educational concerns of the young people of the dwindling historic Rum (Greek) Christian Minority in Istanbul.

    She also serves on the board of the Beau Biden Foundation and Amani Global Works, which focuses on the health needs of children on the Island of Idgwi of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and on HOPE, a newly established ministry on Long Island's East End which hopes to address the scourge of human trafficking.

    She, along with Father Alexander, have been instrumental in fundraising efforts for the ministries and beautification of Long Island's jewel-- the Dormition of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church in Southampton. They are now involved in efforts towards the rebuilding of Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine at the World Trade Center.

    Father Alexander and Presbytera Xanthi are the parents of three children, Michael, Anastasia, and Olga and have nine grandchildren, Alexander, Konstantine, Xanthi, Luca, Konstantina, Demetrios, Steven, Leo, and Michael.

    To learn more about the Award and past recipients, visit archons.org/athenagorasaward
  • German Official: Athens, Skopje Should Solve Name Spat Soon

    By NewsRoom™ →



    SKOPJE, FYROM(AP) — A senior German official has urged FYROM and Greece to resolve a decades-long name dispute that has kept the former Yugoslav republic out of NATO and hindered its efforts to join the European Union.

    According to "The National Herald", speaking at a press conference with FYROM’s Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, Germany’s minister for Europe Michael Roth praised the “creativity and flexibility” of Skopje and Athens and urged them to reach an agreement this year.

    FYROM and Greece have been at odds over the name “Macedonia” for 27 years. Greece claims use of the name indicates territorial aspirations on the northern Greek province of the same name. Due to the name dispute, Greece has blocked FYROM from joining NATO since 2008.

    The two countries have intensified negotiations to resolve the issue in recent months.
  • Britain’s Prince Charles Meets Head of Orthodox Greek Church (PICS )

    By NewsRoom™ →



    ATHENS (AP) — Prince Charles, the heir to the British throne, has met the head of Greece’s Orthodox Christian Church, Archbishop Hieronymos, during an official visit to Athens.

    Charles has long been interested in Orthodox Christianity, privately visiting monasteries in Romania and Greece — where his paternal great-grandfather reigned and his father, Prince Philip, was born.

    Also Thursday, the Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, had a brief walk through central Athens, chatting with passers-by as they went to visit a small Byzantine-era church.

    As we read in "The National Herald", Charles was also due to board a historic Greek warship now serving as a floating museum, the Georgios Averof.

    The royal couple arrived in Greece for a three-day visit Wednesday, meeting the country’s prime minister and president. They will visit the island of Crete Friday.







  • Tsipras to Prince Charles: “Your Visit can be a Milestone to our Bilateral Relations”

    By NewsRoom™ → May 10, 2018


    Charles, Prince of Wales, met with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras at Maximos Mansion on Wednesday afternoon, after his meeting with the President of the Republic Prokopis Pavlopoulos.

    According to the "GREEK REPORTER", Prince Charles said he was grateful for the reception and stressed that he does not remember much from his last visit to Athens because it was many years ago.

    “It is a great pleasure to welcome you to Greece,” Tsipras said. “I know that you have visited Greece repeatedly in the past, but privately. That means you love our country. It is the first time that you visit Greece officially and as they have recently informed me, it is the first time a member of the British royal family makes an official visit to Greece.”

    “I consider this to be a great deal, a very important event,” Tsipras continued, “and I also believe that your visit can be a milestone in our bilateral relations. Especially at this time, as both our countries face very important challenges in their history. And that is why I think we need to further strengthen our cooperation.”

    On his part, the Prince of Wales said: “I am deeply grateful, prime minister, for your welcome… I, as well as my wife, have visited the country and today we consider it a very important opportunity to make an official visit to your country. This visit underlines the ties between the two countries. Ties that are long-lasting and I hope that in the future we will be able to continue what we already share and that we will be able to achieve a great deal in terms of security and the issue of immigration and all the enormous challenges we face. I am grateful to the Greek Government for the support it has shown and for the cooperation it has secured in all these areas. And I think we will continue this great friendship in the future. I’m sure about that”.

    Tsipras said that for all the above reasons he has been asked to visit London by British Prime Minister Theresa May.

    “Will you come?” Prince Charles asked.

    “Yes, of course,” Tsipras replied.
  • Justice Minister Rips Turkey for Holding Two Greek Soldiers

    By NewsRoom™ → May 9, 2018



    ATHENS – Justice Minister Stavros Kontonis – who said he’d like to try eight Turkish soldiers seeking asylum in Greece – is upset at Turkey for keeping two Greek soldiers who accidentally strayed across the border on March 1 while on patrol during bad weather.

    The Turkish soldiers fled to Greece from a failed coup attempt against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in July, 2016 in which they said they didn’t take part but ran in fear for the lives. He has since purged the military and civil society and gained near-dictatorial powers and now is seeking to stay in office with a snap poll he called for June 24.

    Kontonis, noting that Greece had just recently returned a Turkish municipal worker who accidentally crossed the border, called on Turkey to do the same with the Greek soldiers. Military members on both sides who strayed across the border have been quickly returned in the past but Erdogan essentially said the Greek soldiers in this case are hostages and bargaining chips to force Greece to return the Turkish soldiers.

    “It is not just the case of the Turk who entered Greek territory and was tried,” Kontonis told Parliament on May 7, said Kathimerini.

    As we read in "The National Herald", he revealed that two more Turks who were detained recently at the port of Killini, in western Greece, were subsequently released by an administrative court in the city of Pyrgos, after the judge accepted the Turkish consulate in Athens as their fixed residence.

    “I’m saying this to inform Parliament and the public, to make it clear that Greece respects the rule of law. Because when the Greek consulate attended the trial of the two Greek officers and declared the Greek consulate […] as their place of residence, the similar request to release them was not accepted by the Turkish court,” he said, referring to the court ruling in the city of Edirne.

    “Greece upholds the rule of law and does not draw parallels between different illegal and irregular acts,” he said.

    “This is a message, not only to the neighboring country, but also to the international community from which we expect a more stable attitude on the issue of the two Greek officers who, to this day, do not know what they are accused of,” he added.

    Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras opposes asylum for the Turkish soldiers but said they would not be extradited and rejected Erdogan’s suggestion there should be a soldiers-for-soldiers swap to end the dilemma.
  • Greek Police Arrest 14 on Terror-Funding Charges

    By NewsRoom™ →




    A Greek police counter-terrorism unit on Tuesday arrested 14 people — including one Albanian national — on charges of funding a terrorist group and money laundering.

    The defendants, 11 men and three women, were arrested in Attica and other parts of Greece on arrest warrants issued by an investigative judge, according to the Athens-Macedonian News Agency (AMNA).

    The 14 suspects were making deposits into a bank account used by Constantinos Giagtzoglou, a terrorist who is imprisoned for sending a parcel bomb that seriously injured former prime minister Lucas Papademos in May 2017.

    According to AMNA, the investigation began on Oct. 28, after the arrest of 29-year-old Giagtzoglou. The counter-terrorism unit considers the arrest a significant success because it is the first time that people who contributed to the so-called “revolution fund” have been loca
  • Greek President: There are No Grey Zones in the Aegean and Especially in the Dodecanese

    By NewsRoom™ →



    President of the Republic Prokopis Pavlopoulos on Tuesday sent a message to Turkey that it should respect International Law and the European acquis.

    Pavlopoulos was on the island of Symi for the celebrations of the 73rd anniversary of the Dodecanese islands concession to the allies.

    The Greek president pointed out that it should be made clear to all sides that “there are no grey zones in the Aegean and especially in the Dodecanese.”

    The borders of Greece are also borders of the European Union, Pavlopoulos stressed in his speech, during his proclamation as an honorary citizen of Symi.

    The Greek president noted that the status of the final concession of the Dodecanese in Greece is governed by the provisions of the Paris Peace Treaty (April 1947) between the allies, the victors of World War II, and Italy.