Monthly Archives: May 2014

Aυστραλία: «Τιτάνες» για… γέλια

shtitanes

Στα χέρια πιάστηκαν ο Τζέιμς Πάκερ, ένας από τους πλουσιότερους Αυστραλούς και ο παιδικός του φίλος και διευθυντής του τηλεοπτικού δικτύου «9» Ντέιβιντ Γκίντζελ.

Στους δρόμους της πιο φημισμένης παραλίας της Αυστραλίας, στο Bondi Beach του Σίδνεϊ, δυο από τους πλουσιότερους και πιο διάσημους Αυστραλούς ήρθαν στα χέρια, γρονθοκοπήθηκαν και το γεγονός καταγράφτηκε από παπαράτσι με αποτέλεσμα ένας άλλος διάσημος και πάμπλουτος Αυστραλός να πληρώσει 250.000 δολάρια για να έχει την αποκλειστικότητα των φωτογραφιών και του βίντεο!

Το επεισόδιο κυριαρχεί τρεις μέρες στην επικαιρότητα και οι περισσότεροι Αυστραλοί μάλλον το «διασκεδάζουν». Πρωταγωνιστές του επεισοδίου δυο ιδιαίτερα εύσωμοι Αυστραλοί. Ο 46χρονος Τζέιμς Πάκερ,  (ύψος 1.98) από τους πλουσιότερους Αυστραλούς με μια περιουσία  6.4 δις δολαρίων   και ο παιδικός του φίλος και διευθυντής του τηλεοπτικού δικτύου «9» Ντέιβιντ Γκίντζελ (ύψος 1.94).
Οι δυο άνδρες «τα έσπασαν» μετά τον διαζύγιο του Πάκερ με την σύζυγό του Έρικα. Κουμπάρος τους ήταν ο Γκίντζελ. Λέγεται ότι τελευταία ο Πάκερ (που διατηρεί καζίνο στην Αυστραλία και την Ασία και ήταν ο πρώην ιδιοκτήτης του τηλεοπτικού δικτύου «9») «βλέπει» το  μοντέλο Μιράντα Κερ, που επίσης χώρισε πρόσφατα.

Την Κυριακή ο Πάκερ επέστρεψε στην Αυστραλία και μια μέρα νωρίτερα έφτασε και η Κερ. Στο Bondi Beach που διαμένει ο Πάκερ είχε  «αράξει» ένα βαν του καναλιού «9» και ο τελευταίος έκρινε ότι ήταν εκεί για να καταγράψει τυχόν εμφανίσεις του με την Κερ.

Προφανώς διαμαρτυρήθηκε με μήνυμα SMS στο Γκίντζελ ο οποίος βρισκόταν στην περιοχή και τον «επισκέφθηκε» με αποτέλεσμα οι δυο άνδρες να έρθουν στα χέρια και να κυλιστούν στο έδαφος. Ο ένας έχασε ένα δόντι και ο άλλος κυκλοφορεί με μαυρισμένο μάτι από την ιδιαίτερα άγρια συμπλοκή. ( Στο τέλος τους χώρισαν οι σωματοφύλακες του Πάκερ)!

Πάκερ και Γκίντζελ, μετά τον θόρυβο που προκλήθηκε εξέδωσαν κοινή ανακοίνωση όπου αναφέρουν ότι «είναι φίλοι εδώ και 35 χρόνια και παραμένουν φίλοι παρά τις διαφορές που κατά καιρούς είχαν».

Πάντως το επεισόδιο αναμένεται να ερευνηθεί από την αστυνομία και ίσως να έχει επιπτώσεις στις επιχειρηματικές δραστηριότητες και των δυο ανδρών.
Αξίζει να σημειωθεί ότι ο Ντέιβιντ Γκίντζελ ανέλαβε την ευθύνη για τον καβγά, κι αυτό προκειμένου να προστατεύσει και τον Τζέιμς Πάκερ μετά την απόφαση της αστυνομίας να διεξάγει έρευνα.

Το επεισόδιο μεταδόθηκε σε  όλο τον κόσμο και αυτό, ίσως πλήξει τον κ. Πάκερ που έχει καζίνο σε διάφορες χώρες και οι ιδιοκτήτες καζίνο πρέπει να είναι «άμεπτου χαρακτήρος».

Πηγή: Νέος Κόσμος

$1 million reward for leads to the killer of Dimitrios Belias and George Germanos

Reward

Victoria Police offers two $1 million reward for leads that might result to the arrest of the killer of Dimitrios Belias and George Germanos.

Dimitrios Bellias was killed in an execution-style murder in a car park on St Kilda Road in 1999, while George Germanos was fatally shot in 2001 and his body was found in a park in Armadale.

Victoria Police believes that the killers of Demitrios Beliaw and George Germanos might also be involved in the murder of 23 years old Maryanna Lanciana in 1984. Another $1 million dollar award has been offered by Victoria Police in an effort to track down the killers of the 23 years old woman as well.

source: Neos Kosmos

Samaras confident coalition will survive

GR-Samaras-tax%20cuts

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras insisted that there is no prospect of the coalition collapsing after this month’s local and European Parliament elections.

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras insisted on Tuesday that there is no prospect of the coalition collapsing after this month’s local and European Parliament elections.

Speaking to Antenna TV, Samaras played down the threat of government turmoil if New Democracy and PASOK have poor election results. “The government has held up through tough times. It will hold up now as well,” he said. “There is no way that stability will be at risk after the elections.”

New Democracy decided to refrain from voicing objections to PASOK’s decision late on Monday to object to certain articles in a bill introducing new regulations for open-air fruit and vegetable markets. The conservatives interpreted this as PASOK caving in under pressure from producers and traders but decided not to highlight the issue as the Socialists are struggling in opinion polls.

Instead, Samaras focused on his government’s pledge not to make more cuts to meet fiscal targets. “There will be no new memorandum, there will be no new measures,” he said, adding that the fiscal gap until 2018 will be no more than 1 billion euros.

Samaras, however, refused to commit to scrapping the solidarity tax on people’s incomes later this year. “I cannot promise something I am not 100 percent sure about but it is our intention to do something like that,” he said.

Source: Kathimerini

Tony Abbott’s policy a failure as boats keep coming, says Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa

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Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, pictured with his Australian counterpart Julie Bishop, says “issues” remain between the two countries. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

The turn-back of two groups of asylum seekers on Monday has put further strain on the Australia-Indonesia relationship after Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa launched another stinging criticism of the Abbott government’s boats policy. .

Indonesian officials confirmed that two boats of asylum seekers were intercepted by Australian naval or Customs vessels in recent days and their 20 passengers put together onto one wooden vessel and pushed back towards Indonesian waters.

Dr Natalegawa said there were a few “issues” between the two countries, but that the boat policy remained a problem.

“[The existence] of a problem has been confirmed by the return [this week],” Dr Natalegawa said.

“[That boat] has been forced back. It proves that Abbott’s policy is not successful. Their unilateral policy coerces asylum seekers, threatens them and violates their human rights — and the policy doesn’t bear fruit [because the boats keep coming] …

“What Australia is doing now is clearly against and denies all comprehensive principles in dealing with the issue of asylum seekers. Australia is acting as if it can simply move the problem to its neighbour,” he said.

Dr Natalegawa was speaking outside a conference that Prime Minister Tony Abbott hastily withdrew from on Friday allegedly because of embarrassment over the imminent boat return.

However, that’s not the explanation Mr Abbott gave the Indonesians — and which was accepted by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono — that he was too busy preparing the federal budget and dealing with the Commission of Audit report.

Dr Natalegawa said there had been “no detailed explanation of the reason for his absence” and that it was “up to the Australian government to provide information”.

A spokesman for the Indonesian Co-ordinating Minister for Legal, Political and Security Affairs, Djoko Suyanto, also criticised the policy.

“The policy of sending the boats back creates uneasy relations … It is unfortunate that Mr Abbott failed to come to Bali, otherwise both heads of state could have sat and talked over the problems together,” said spokesman Agus Barnas.

Mr Agus confirmed on Tuesday that 20 asylum seekers turned back by Australia had arrived on one boat but actually came from two different vessels intercepted by Australian authorities in the same waters.

The two boats are the eighth and ninth confirmed to have been returned to Indonesia under the Operation Sovereign Borders policy.

Some details remain sketchy, but Mr Agus said the first boat, carrying 18 asylum seekers of mixed nationality plus three crew, left from Makassar, South Sulawesi, towards the end of April. The second boat carried just two Nepalese people and one Indonesian crew member, and had left from Rote island in Indonesia’s east on about May 1.

According to a statement released by the Indonesian navy late on Monday night, the larger boat was intercepted by Operation Sovereign Borders vessels on May 1 near Ashmore Reef, an Australian territory in the ocean west of Darwin.

The asylum seekers on that boat said they had been escorted in their wooden vessel closer to Indonesia where, on Sunday, the three men from the other boat were put on board.

The wooden boat was then directed towards Indonesian territory and left behind by the Australian navy. It ran out of fuel or the engine broke down at Lay Island in Indonesia’s remote eastern province. The men were stranded there before being found by Indonesian navy personnel, the statement said.

The 20 are now in immigration detention in Kupang, West Timor, while the crews were being questioned at the local navy office, Mr Agus said.

Australian Immigration Minister Scott Morrison has refused to comment on the turn-back.

source: smh.com.au

Budget 2014: Teresa Gambaro says proposed debt levy will ‘devastate the economy’

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Teresa Gambaro

The Member for Brisbane says the tax hike being proposed for higher income earners will be a broken promise, and has lashed out at the Prime Minister and his office’s way of dealing with the backbench.

Ms Gambaro advocates more spending cuts over raising taxes and says the Government is failing to communicate with voters properly.
“We didn’t go to the election with a debt levy and I believe it’s a breach of promise,” Ms Gambaro told the ABC.

“At the last election we went to the Australian people with a promise of being a government of no surprises, so it’s absolutely incumbent that after the six years that we went through of Labor’s chaos and confusion that we provide certainty and leadership.”

Ms Gambaro has echoed concerns raised by former treasurer Peter Costello, who says the deficit levy will have “no economic benefits” and could harm growth.
“It will cause great uncertainty and it will cause devastating impacts on the economy,” she said.

It will] reduce consumer confidence, it will stop people from spending. That in turn will have an impact on the business community and their ability to employ people.”

Cabinet ministers have arrived in Canberra to finalise the Government’s first budget due next Tuesday, including a critical decision on how the proposed debt levy will work.

Cabinet will be asked to approve raising income taxes for people earning more than $180,000 per year. It is not yet decided how long the hike will last or if it could also hit those on lower incomes of above $150,000.

Speaking to reporters on her way to Parliament House, Deputy Liberal Leader Julie Bishop said she would not comment on deliberations before the Cabinet.
“I don’t discuss Cabinet meetings in advance of Cabinet meetings. I don’t discuss budget matters prior to the budget being handed down,” Ms Bishop said.

Asked if a debt levy could constitute a broken promise, Ms Bishop said “everyone will have to wait until next Tuesday night when the budget’s being handed down, that’s a matter for the Treasurer to announce on budget night”.

The Prime Minister is advocating the temporary levy because the Government says it is the only way the rich can share the burden of repaying the nation’s debt. Tony Abbott says it would not breach his pledge to not introduce new taxes because the levy would only be “temporary”.

Growing list of MPs condemning debt tax Ms Gambaro joins nearly half a dozen Government MPs who have gone on the record condemning the idea of a debt tax. They include Liberal senators and MPs Zed Seselja, Cory Bernardi, Warren Entsch and Nationals MP John Cobb.

But other MPs are defending the executive’s rationale, saying the Coalition inherited a deficit which has to be solved.

Liberals David Bushby, Bob Baldwin, Russell Broadbent and Ewen Jones are all backing the proposal to raise income taxes, with Mr Baldwin telling the ABC the debt cannot be solved by “wishful thinking”.

Labor is opposing any deficit levy, calling it a “deceit tax”. Junior minister Jamie Briggs says Ms Gambaro is unwise to be pre-empting the budget, which Cabinet is yet to finalise.

“Teresa’s a backbencher, and she’s entitled to talk about issues that she wants to. But I think it would be wise for Teresa to wait until next Tuesday to start expressing views on the budget, until she’s seen the entire budget,” he said.
“So it seems a little pre-emptive for her to be commenting publicly in the media about something she doesn’t know the detail of.”

Mr Briggs also brushed aside Mr Costello’s criticisms of the debt tax, saying it is not an unexpected attack from a former politician who has vacated the field.
“Former footballers always claim that football was a better standard when they played and thus their comparative performance was always better,” Mr Briggs said.

“It’s not surprising that people are entitled to their view.” Abbott needs to consult more with backbenchers. Ms Gambaro says the dissent from Government MPs is evidence the executive needs to fix the way it deals with the backbench.
“There’s not enough consultation with the backbench,” she said.
“I wasn’t consulted on paid parental leave, I wasn’t consulted on any of these prospective policies, and I think there needs to be greater consultation with the backbench.

“There is no question that there is a very tough budget deficit and that we have to take some tough measures, everyone understands that, but we need to take people with us and we need to communicate better.” And she says that includes the way Mr Abbott himself deals with his colleagues, as well as his office.

“He really does need to communicate with the backbench a lot better than has been the case,” she said. “I think that it needs to improve. There’s not enough two-way flow of information, and when you’re bringing in signature policies like paid parental leave, you really do need to bring that to a party room meeting.
“I don’t think you can just pull surprises out of a hat.”

Ms Gambaro says the electorate is not taking kindly to the Government’s unexpected announcements, like the restoration of knights and dames.
“That certainly was a surprise … and you even have a former prime minister questioning the validity of bringing that back,” she said.

“I think there needs to be greater communication and the backbench needs to be consulted more and that’s the way it is.”

tony-abbott-fact-check-data
source: abc.net.au

CNN: Τουριστική παγίδα η Ακρόπολη

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Τουριστική παγίδα χαρακτηρίζει το BBC την Ακρόπολη, συγκαταλέγοντάς την ανάμεσα στα 8 καλύτερα μέρη που πρέπει να επισκεφθεί κανείς ακόμη κι αν έχει ξαναπάει, παρόλο που μπορεί να είναι γεμάτα κόσμο και υπερτιμημένα.
Ωστόσο, όπως γράφει το CNN, εμείς συνεχίζουμε να πηγαίνουμε. Εκατομμύρια κόσμου. «Γιατί άραγε;» αναρωτιέται. Γιατί όσο κακή κι αν είναι μια εμπειρία, δεν παύουν να είναι αριστουργήματα.

Σύμφωνα με τον επαγγελματία ταξιδευτή, Γκάρι Αρντ: «Είχα μια φριχτή εμπειρία, όταν επισκέφτηκα τις Πυραμίδες, αλλά θα ξαναπάω και θα συνεχίσω να τις συστήνω στον κόσμο, γιατί στο κάτω κάτω της γραφής είναι οι Πυραμίδες. Μερικά μέρη απλά πρέπει να τα επισκεφθείς και να ξεχάσεις όλες τις αρνητικές στιγμές».
Η Ακρόπολη κατέλαβε τη δεύτερη θέση στα καλύτερα μέρη που πρέπει να επισκεφθεί κανείς, αφήνοντας πίσω το Στόουνχετζ και το Γκραντ Κάνυον.

Το CNN γράφει για την Ακρόπολη:
«Η άγρια σύγχρονη Αθήνα, μπορεί να προκαλέσει ένα πολιτισμικό σοκ σε όσους περιμένουν λευκά μάρμαρα σε κάθε γωνιά του δρόμου, αλλά για τους περισσότερους η πιο ενοχλητική εμπειρία είναι η πολύωρη αναμονή για ένα εισιτήριο στην Ακρόπολη, δίπλα σε φύλακες και λαοθάλασσα επισκεπτών.
Η ανάβαση στην Ακρόπολη γίνεται υπό τον καυτό ήλιο, παρέα με χιλιάδες άλλους τουρίστες, αλλά στην κορυφή θα καταλάβετε γιατί εκατομμύρια άνθρωποι την επισκέπτονται κάθε χρόνο και συνεχίζουν να έρχονται ξανά και ξανά.

Εδώ βρίσκεται η καρδιά της Αθήνας και ίσως ολόκληρης της Ελλάδας, σε ένα βάθρο ύψους 150 μέτρων. Η Ακρόπολη έχει υποστεί χιλιάδες χρόνια πολέμων, κλοπής των λίθων, την τιμωρία από τον καυτό ήλιο αλλά παραμένει ακόμη εκεί. Εμπνευστείτε από αυτό, σφίξτε τα δόντια σας γιατί πραγματικά το αξίζει».

ΤΑ 8 ΚΑΛΥΤΕΡΑ ΜΕΡΗ ΠΟΥ ΠΡΕΠΕΙ ΝΑ ΕΠΙΣΚΕΦΘΕΙΣ ΞΑΝΑ ΚΑΙ ΞΑΝΑ

Ταζ Μαχάλ, Ινδία
Ακρόπολη, Αθήνα
Το μετρό του Λονδίνου
Ο δρόμος Khao San, Μπανγκόκ
Sacre Coeur, Παρίσι
Στόουνχετζ, Βρετανία
Ο Χριστός Λυτρωτής, Ρίο Ντε Τζανέιρο
Γκράντ Κάνυον, Αριζόνα

Πηγή:Νέος Κόσμος

More Nigerian girls abducted by suspected Boko Haram militants

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Suspected Boko Haram militants have kidnapped eight more girls in northeastern Nigeria.

The latest kidnapping happened on Sunday night in the village of Warabe, in Borno state. The girls taken were between the ages of 12 and 15.

On Monday, Boko Haram’s leader threatened to “sell” more than 230 girls seized from their school, also in Borno, on 14 April.

The Islamist insurgency by Boko Haram has left thousands dead since 2009.

The BBC’s Mansur Liman in Abuja says the area around Warabe, the site of the latest abductions, is a stronghold of the Islamist movement.

The gunmen arrived in two trucks and also seized animals and food from the village.

Communications are very poor in the area, which explains why the news took several days to emerge, our correspondent says.

Residents from a nearby town told AFP that they feared Boko Haram would target them next.

“We in Gwoza are also living in fear because of the kidnap of eight girls in Warabe,” Peter Gambo said.

“We have no security here. If the gunmen decide to pick our own girls, nobody can stop them” he said.

Warabe is also close to the Sambisa forest, where the first group of schoolgirls is thought to have been taken.

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau released a video on Monday confirming that his group had abducted them.

“God instructed me to sell them, they are his properties and I will carry out his instructions,” he said.

The government said it welcomed an offer by the US to send a team of experts, including soldiers and hostage negotiators, to help investigate the first abductions.

Officials from the US State Department said there was evidence that some of the girls had been moved into neighbouring countries such as Cameroon and Chad.

UN envoy and former British prime minister Gordon Brown has also called on the US and UK to mount a surveillance operation and to help rescue the girls if they find them.

There is growing concern, within and outside Nigeria, at the failure to locate the girls.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, whose military sought to overcome similar tactics by the Lord’s Resistance Army, condemned the Boko Haram attacks.

“These people are ideologically bankrupt” he said.

“It would be a mistake for the government of Nigeria to negotiate with these people. The most important thing is to defeat them, then negotiations can come after that,” he added.

Boko Haram, which means “Western education is forbidden”, has attacked numerous educational institutions in northern Nigeria.

It has also attacked targets in the capital Abuja, with the deadliest attack so far coming on the same day the 200 girls were kidnapped in Chibok.

In that attack, at least 70 people died in a bomb blast in the suburb of Nyanya.

For the past one and half years Boko Haram has been carrying out kidnappings of girls but April’s attack was on a much larger scale. It should also be noted that Boko Haram began this tactic when the Nigerian security forces also began kidnapping, or rather taking as prisoners, the wives and children of Boko Haram members.

On an operational level, Boko Haram is likely using the girls as human shields and keeping them in their camps, which will prevent the Nigerian air force from bombing those camps. Furthermore, there is also the potential monetary reward if Boko Haram can sell some of them back to their parents.

It’s very likely that the girls have been split up into dozens of groups – maybe into twos or threes or fours. Any rescue effort will have to be done piecemeal and might take over a decade. When you look at Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, they seized some girls captive more than a decade ago. Some of them still remain captive, even though most of them have been freed or escaped.

Jacob Zenn is the African Affairs analyst at The Jamestown Foundation

source: bbc.com

Ange Postecoglou ends Lucas Neill’s World Cup dream

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After months of debate about Lucas Neill’s future, Socceroos coach Ange Postecoglou has officially ruled the former skipper out of next month’s World Cup.

Postecoglou made the decision on the weekend that the 36-year-old was not in contention to make his extended 30-man squad, which will be named next week for a training camp in Gosford.

Neill was desperately trying to convince Postecoglou he was still worth his place in Brazil by picking up various short-term deals, playing with J-League side Omiya Ardija and English Championship clubs Watford and Doncaster Rovers all in the past year.

Despite his best efforts, Neill couldn’t convince the coach to change his mind after being left out of the squad for the match against Ecuador in March.

“It was difficult because he’s worked damn hard to try and make himself ready and available,” Postecoglou said on Tuesday. “He’s shown an enormous determination to go to this World Cup.

“From my perspective, I had to make a decision and over the past six months, in terms of form and fitness, there just wasn’t enough evidence there for me that he’d be able to hold up in a World Cup.

“For somebody as decorated as him, it’s a tough decision to deny him going to a third World Cup. It’s a decision that weighed heavily on me. I wanted to make sure I was absolutely clear on the premise of my decision.”

The coach hinted that Neill’s feverish swapping of clubs had perhaps not aided his cause.

“He was probably a bit unlucky, in terms of the moves he made,” Postecoglou said. “Certainly, from January onwards, if he’d had four months of football under his belt, I guess a different decision would have been made.

“But it’s not easy. He’s shown outstanding determination and it’s a credit to him. You can see why he’s played for his country many times and he’s a leader. He’s certainly gone down fighting, if you want to put it in that terminology.”

Postecoglou called Neill directly and admitted the veteran did not take the news overly well.

“Before the 30-man squad was announced I thought it was important to speak to him directly and inform him that he wouldn’t make the 30,” he said.

“From my perspective, it’s about paying him the respect of being captain for six years and captain of the World Cup campaign so far. It was right I told him personally.

“From his perspective, he was very disappointed, but acknowledged it was a decision I had to make.”

The growing number of injuries further dented Neill’s cause to be included in another World Cup squad.

“It becomes a factor, particularly on the back of not playing a lot of football,” Postecoglou said.

“We’re going to a World Cup and there’s a level of intensity required in the camp. An isolated injury here or there you can judge differently, but the combination of the lack of regular football and the little niggles that he got made the decision for me.”

Neill, who is stranded on 96 caps, is very unlikely to play for Australia again – though he has indicated a desire to fight his way into the Asian Cup squad, a tournament for which he has already been signed to perform ambassadorial duties.

“My discussions with him were purely about the World Cup and he had every intention of playing on next year, probably in Europe,” Postecoglou said. “The discussion wasn’t anything beyond this World Cup, both from my perspective and his perspective as well.

“I guess it’s a sad time in the bubble of a moment, [but] it’s just for one tournament, just for the World Cup.”

The process of finding a new captain won’t start until the squad is named, with Mile Jedinak and Tim Cahill thought to be the front runners for the coveted position.

“We’ve still got to announce the squad and then get into camp,” Postecoglou said. “It’s a decision for the immediate future.”

Ironically, Neill’s last game for the Socceroos looks likely to be the 1-0 win over Costa Rica in December, which was also Postecoglou’s first game in charge.

The news compounds the results of the past weekend, where Neill was part of the Doncaster side relegated to League One after they lost 1-0 to Leicester City.

source: smh.com.au

Greece: Municipality rapped for boy’s death

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A probe by public administration officials into the death of a 13-year-old at a fairground has highlighted serious shortfalls on the part of the local municipality.

A probe by public administration officials into the death of a 13-year-old at a fairground in Elliniko, southern Athens, last month has highlighted serious shortfalls on the part of the local municipality, which was found to have rented out the site illegally.

Inspectors on Monday delivered their findings to Administrative Reform Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who described them as “disheartening.”

“The fairground should never have operated and that is something that should concern us all,” he said, noting that the improvement of the institutional framework governing child play areas was as important as the attribution of responsibility for the fatal accident at Elliniko.

The probe found the Elliniko Municipality had broken the law when it rented the site to a company that had not applied for an operating license and which used an area of 2,450 square meters instead of the 700 square meters it had paid to rent. Inspectors also found that local authorities did not conduct any inspections at the site, which lacked basic safety measures.

A 13-year-old boy was killed and his 9-year-old sister seriously injured when a gust of wind blew a water roller on the site into the air.

Four people – the Greek manager of the fairground, an Italian national who rented him equipment and two Bangladeshi workers – face criminal charges in connection with the accident while Elliniko Mayor Christos Kortzidis has been called to testify.

Source: Kathimerini

Greek vinegar in Aus top three

vinegar

Kostas Papadimitriou heads a food processing company making inroads in the Australian market. Photo Supplied.

Balsamic vinegar produced by a Kalamata-based company makes inroads in Oceania.

Papadimitriou C.C.S.A., one of the largest food processing companies in the south of Greece, was founded in 1939 in Messinia, near Kalamata.

This family owned and run business, with products based on the nutritional concepts of the Mediterranean diet and clients that range from Greece all the way to 28 other countries, has managed in the last seven years to make an impact in the Australian market as well.

The balsamic vinegar produced by the Papadimitriou Company, which has been number one in the Greek market since 2005, has managed to become the third most sought after balsamic vinegar in the Australian market.

The Greek food processing company, headed by Christos Papadimitriou and his father Konstantinos, entered the Australian market seven years ago through the Sydney International Food Festival, and today its balsamic vinegar is sold through the Coles and Woolworths chains of supermarkets throughout the continent.

The CEO of the company, Christos Papadimitriou, attributes their success in sales in this country to the strong support their product has received from the local Greek Australian community, the dietary similarities of the wider community with the Greek community, and to the willingness of Australians, who love cooking as he said in the Greek daily To Vima, to try out new tastes and products.

Balsamic vinegar and cream, mustard, Corinthian currants, dried fruits and other organic offerings are all produced by the Kalamata based company for Greek and international markets, which include amongst others Japan, Canada, United Kingdom and South Africa.

Last May, Papadimitriou C.C.S.A. became only the fifth Greek company to join Endeavor Global, a non-profit international organisation aiming to establish high impact entrepreneurship in emerging countries, as the leading force for sustainable economic development.
The turnover of this Greek success story last year reached 10 million euros and 75 per cent of that income was generated from overseas markets.

source: Neos Kosmos