Daily Archives: June 23, 2014

Αυστραλοί οι πιο σέξι άνδρες!

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Αντίστοιχα για τις γυναίκες, οι πιο σέξι προέρχονται από τη Βραζιλία

Πολλοί είναι εκείνοι που αναζητούν μια μικρή ή μια μεγάλη ερωτική περιπέτεια κατά τη διάρκεια ενός ταξιδιού. Σε ποιες χώρες, όμως, βρίσκονται οι πιο σέξι ερωτικοί παρτενέρ;

Η ιστοσελίδα MissTravel που ειδικεύεται στο travel dating ζήτησε από τα μέλη της να βαθμολογήσουν τις πιο σέξι εθνικότητες.
Και ιδού οι δύο δεκάδες στις οποίες κατέληξαν.

Οι πιο σέξι άνδρες προέρχονται από:

1. Αυστραλία
2. Ιταλία
3. Βρετανία
4. Σκοτία
5. Ισπανία
6. ΗΠΑ
7. Ιρλανδία
8. Βραζιλία
9. Καναδά
10 Ολλανδία

Αντίστοιχα για τις γυναίκες, οι πιο σέξι προέρχονται από:

1. Βραζιλία
2. Ρωσία
3. Κολομβία
4. Βρετανία
5. Φιλιππίνες
6. Ισπανία
7. Αυστραλία
8. Βουλγαρία
9. Νότια Αφρική
10 Καναδά

Πηγή: Νέος Κόσμος

Αυξάνεται ο αριθμός των καρχαριών στον Ειρηνικό

 

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“Αιχμηρά” τα μυστικά του Ειρηνικού

 

Ο αριθμός των μεγάλων λευκών καρχαριών στον βορειοανατολικό Ειρηνικό Ωκεανό, αυξήθηκε σημαντικά τα τελευταία χρόνια σύμφωνα με μία πρόσφατη έρευνα Αμερικανών επιστημόνων που δημοσιεύθηκε στο περιοδικό PLOS ONE.

Η πιο πάνω έρευνα έρχεται σε αντίθεση με μια προηγούμενη έρευνα του πανεπιστημίου Stanford της Καλιφόρνιας που υποστήριζε ότι ο αριθμός των λευκών καρχαριών μειώνεται επικίνδυνα.

Την έρευνα του Πανεπιστημίου Stanford υιοθέτησαν αρκετές οργανώσεις προστασίας των θαλασσών και του περιβάλλοντος και οι οποίες στη συνέχεια κάλεσαν τις αρμόδιες Αρχές των Ηνωμένων Πολιτειών της Αμερικής να ανακηρύξουν τους λευκούς καρχαρίες ως είδος υπό εξαφάνιση και να απαγορεύσουν στους αλιευτικούς στόλους να τους σκοτώνουν.

Οι μεγάλοι λευκοί καρχαρίες -το μήκος των οποίων ξεπερνά τα 6 μέτρα- τρέφονται με φώκιες και άλλα μεγάλα ψάρια.
Η νέα έρευνα στάλθηκε στις Αρχές. οι οποίες και διατήρησαν τα προστατευτικά απαγορευτικά μέτρα που έχουν υιοθετήσει πριν χρόνια χωρίς όμως να ανακηρύξουν τους λευκούς καρχαρίες ως είδος υπό εξαφάνιση.

Πηγή: Νέος Κόσμος

Socceroo Tim Cahill enters realm of legend with logic-defying gifts

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Such is the mythic position that Tim Cahill now occupies in Australian soccer history that it sometimes appears there is something otherworldly about him.

His ability to pop up at the right time and place, to score such crucial goals, his longevity and freakish sense of timing seem uncanny.

His place among the pantheon of Australian greats is secure, and even on the world stage he is part of a rare band to have played and scored in three World Cups.

Yes, we know Cahill was born in western Sydney to a father from London and a Western Samoan mother, and that he left home and went to the unprepossessing surrounds of south-east London at an early age to play for Millwall.

His path to Australian greatness was not easy: one ill-advised game as a teenager to help out Western Samoa in an under-age FIFA tournament while he was on holiday in the land of his mother’s birth almost cost him an entire international career as the sport’s powerbrokers insisted that he was subsequently to be tied to the island nation.

It was not until his mid-20s that Cahill finally got clearance to play for Australia, so in some sense the nation’s leading all-time goalscorer is making up for lost time.

But how does he do it?

So often does he defy logic, and gravity, that it’s tempting to think that at some point Cahill must have made a Faustian compact with the Devil – 20 years of footballing prowess in exchange for his immortal soul.

Or perhaps there is a picture of him – The Portrait of Timothy Cahill – stacked behind some hoarding signs in a dingy dressing room in a far-flung football field in western Sydney.

It ages and grows weary, the battlemarks of every game, every challenge, every tackle and every injury scratched out on its surface as the image declines and grows more feeble with every game that Cahill plays. Meanwhile the man himself appears to only get stronger, fresher and more dynamic as he continues on, immune to weariness, doubt or the decline that impacts every other player.

How else to explain his extraordinary dynamism and talent?

After all, this is a player who has never been much of a dribbler, he’s hardly known as an incisive passer of the ball, he is a clumsy tackler (hence the suspension that kept him out of Australia’s game with Spain) and not known as someone who can control the rhythm and flow of a game.

Yet he exercises extraordinary influence and can shape the outcome of a match in an instant with his ability to get into the penalty area at the perfect moment to meet the ball with either his head or his foot to score crucial goals. It’s a priceless, innate talent that few possess.

His former teammates are in no doubt what his secret is – and it’s certainly not some Faustian deal or supernatural influence through a hidden painting.

It’s sheer force of will, character, hard work and an unquenchable thirst for success allied to a “never give up” mentality.

”Timmy is amazing. You see him out on the pitch, you know he is never going to stop, never going to give up. He is a winner, a fighter, he always wants the ball, he always wants to do something with it, he fights, he scraps he just never gives up. It’s something in him, it’s hard to teach that,” says Craig Moore, his former international captain and now a mentor with the Australian team.

It’s a gift, a force of character, an element of nature that makes Cahill what he is: that, and the preparedness to work hard, believe in himself and never take no for an answer.

It’s not a bad template for future Socceroos to adapt – even if literary figures might suggest there are some shortcuts to be taken.

source: smh.com.au

Australia dragging chain on G20’s global tax crackdown

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Federal Treasurer Joe Hockey has promised to ‘name and shame’ countries that fall behind economic growth targets. Photo: Louise Kennerley

Australia has been accused of delaying global action on tax evasion by failing to sign an early information sharing agreement as part of its commitment to the G20.

The agreement, part of the OECD’s new automatic exchange program, was endorsed by finance ministers at a G20 meeting in Sydney in February.

Australia is chair to the G20 and will lead discussions on tax evasion and profit shifting at meetings in Brisbane in November.

The exchange program will see tax authorities swap private information on bank accounts and other financial assets every year. It is seen as a key reform in the global crackdown on tax evasion.

Australia, which has traditionally taken a leading role in the fight against tax evasion, has yet to sign.

The Treasury is believed to be going slow on the issue in order to have more time to consult with business. It is understood to be concerned about the cost of compliance, especially for Australia’s big banks.

A spokeswoman for the minister for finance, Senator Mathias Cormann, declined to comment.

Transparency International, which advocates for greater sharing of information between countries, said it was disappointing that Australia had not yet become a signatory to the program given its leadership role at the meetings.

”It was a bit disappointing that Australia will no longer be an early adopter,” Maggie Murphy, a senior program coordinator said.

”If you’re championing a process, if you’re the leader of this group of nations, and you’re at the same time saying we need an international body to take things forward, then you need to be part of that drive forward.”

”It’s disappointing to see that there’s been a reluctance and the timeline has been dragged out. It’s going to take a lot longer [now].”

So far, more than 40 countries have already signed up to the program, including developed countries such as Germany and the UK as well as tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands.

Ms Murphy said that any extended consultation with business over compliance costs could diminish trust in Australia at the G20.

”If [there is] a behind-closed-doors discussion then I think they’re going to lack the trust from other stakeholders,” she said.

”It would be really upsetting if compliance was being used as a reason for delaying something which can increase transparency, because it’s muddying the real reason behind having compliance.

”Compliance is about standards, it’s about transparency and having a clean business environment, and if you start to bandy about compliance unfairly, you’re selling the benefits short.”

Australia’s failure to sign up to the tax arrangement is in steep contrast to its approach to other G20 issues.

Over the weekend, Treasurer Joe Hockey threatened to ”name and shame” any G20 countries that fell behind in meeting separate global economic growth targets.

“Some people are just reheating the existing initiatives and that is not acceptable,” Mr Hockey told the Financial Times.

“I don’t want to name and shame at the moment but I will, coming up to [a September meeting in] Cairns.”

A joint statement by signatories to the tax swap agreement said it provided a ”step change in our ability to clamp down on tax evasion, which reduces public revenues and increases the burden on those who pay their taxes”.

”We invite other countries and jurisdictions to join us in this early adoption initiative and to create rapidly a truly global system of automatic information exchange which leaves no hiding places for tax evasion”.

source: smh.com.au

Gerontopoulos welcomes St Spyridon students

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Deputy Foreign Minister of Greece responsible for the Hellenic diaspora Akis Gerontopoulos (C) with students and teachers of St Spyridon College at Syntagma Square in Athens. Photo Supplied.

Students and teachers of Sydney’s St Spyridon College are currently visiting Greece.

Deputy Foreign Minister of Greece responsible for the Hellenic diaspora, Akis Gerontopoulos, last Sunday met, in the heart of Athens at Syntagma Square, students and teachers of Sydney’s St Spyridon College who are currently visiting Greece on holidays.

The students and Minister laid a wreath at the Shrine of the Unknown Soldier in Syntagma Square as agreed earlier in the year during the Greek Minister’s visit at St Spyridon’s College in Sydney in March.

source: Neos Kosmos

 

WORLD CUP 2014:Australia eyes Spain sendoff

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The Socceroos will give the Spaniards no mercy in their final match for the World Cup.

Our fate might be sealed, but the Socceroos aren’t going to walk away from the World Cup without a stunning send off.

Up against the Cup’s biggest upset, Spain, at the Arena da Baixada, Curitiba next Monday (Tuesday 2.00 am AEST), the whole team is itching to show the world that Australia isn’t a team it can underestimate. Already Australia holds a better goal difference than the title holders Spain, a feat no one would have put their money on before Spain’s demoralising 5-1 loss to the Netherlands.

The squad came into the World Cup hoping to cause some upsets, and it definitely has. Both Chile and the Netherlands thought they were going to have easy wins, but in fact were chasing after the speedy Socceroos, leaving the pitch still gawking at Tim Cahill’s goals.

Despite not qualifying for the knock out stage, the Socceroos aren’t going to take their last game lightly. After a recovery session at their pool in their home base of Vitoria on Thursday, it’s back to business for the squad.

Socceroo defensive midfielder Matt McKay says he’s extremely happy with the way the squad has gelled in Vitoria, and knows that the Spaniards will be desperate to restore some pride in their game.

“Spain are a special team and are still reigning world champions, and will want to make a statement against us,” he said.

McKay, just like the rest of the team, believes in coach Ange Postecoglou’s goal of building the new golden age of the Socceroos, and knows it will take time.

“We are here to win games. We made a statement to the world that we can play and have made Australia proud,” he says.

Tim Cahill will miss the next match but will be there to support the team and make sure they achieve the right send off.

“This last game is massive. If we beat Spain it will be one of the best moments in Australian football.”

Cahill paid tribute to coach Postecoglou who, despite losing both opening games at the World Cup (Chile 3-1, Holland 3-2), has reinvigorated the national team since taking over eight months ago.

“Under Ange we trust in him and he trusts us. He knew a long time ago that we could do something special at this World Cup.”

“It is great to have a coach who believes in us and who will be around for a long time.”

source: Neos Kosmos

Young leading the change in Greece: Economides

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Peter Economides at HACCI’s seminar at the State Library of Victoria this week. PHOTO: Constantly Flashing Photography.

Ad guru and brand strategist Peter Economides sees the creative young in Greece making big differences by adapting to harsh circumstances.

“When you’re in serious trouble, you have to do something, you have no choice,” world-renowned brand strategist Peter Economides muses.

That push under very harsh circumstances is helping young Greek professionals to find new and inventive ways to stay afloat in their debt riddled country.
With the unemployment level for the 18-34s still teetering at 60 per cent, the situation has fostered a new age of start-ups and business ventures for the young that stay behind.

Mr Economides, who has helped brands like Apple and Coca-Cola define themselves globally, believes Greece’s young are creating the change that Greece so desperately needs, way ahead of the government’s actions.

“We have a very well educated young population that just can’t find work,” he tells Neos Kosmos on his visit to Melbourne.

“So what happens is you either pack up and leave and go somewhere else, you join Golden Dawn and you get all anti-immigrant or you start throwing Molotov cocktails because you’ve become very angry.”

“But there’s another reaction that comes out of all of this, which is ‘I need to do something’.”

This reality, that being educated and able to work isn’t necessarily going to get you a job, and most probably won’t, has created a new group of Greeks that have to think outside the box, invest in a good idea, and put everything they have into making it work.

They aren’t going to wait for the government to introduce new reforms, they learn to work with what they have, and work the system to their advantage.

In the past couple of years, countless Greek start ups have found global success, making products that aren’t adding to an already saturated market, but filling voids in the consumer world.

Companies like Dirty Secret, an app that started out as a direct response to the crisis, giving young people tips on where to go in Athens that is off the beaten track, something to look forward to.

The app/email subscription business has now expanded to 72 cities and is coming soon to Australia.

Greeks aren’t just filling niche markets, they are also creating unique Greek products that add to already well established markets.
COCO-MAT, a company that makes mattresses out of Greek seaweed and cotton, has become a hit in 12 countries and is expanding to more.

The idea came to owner Paul Efmorfidis when he was on a beach in Greece. Annoyed at having to sit on uncomfortable, rough sand, he laid out some seaweed to sit on, and discovered just how comfortable it could be.

“He said, ‘I can’t make mattresses better than Germans or Americans but I can make mattresses only as a Greek can’,” Mr Economides remembers Mr Efmorfidis telling him

In 2012, Mr Economides launched his ‘Ginete’ campaign, to create a safehaven for creatives and start ups.

Although the idea hasn’t seen the implementation phase, Mr Economides has fostered a smaller project with the help of the Dutch Embassy in Greece.

The project, called Orange Grove, started out as a way to foster better relations with the Dutch and the Greeks, but doing it in a very constructive way.

The project, set up in a 400 sqm space in the Dutch Embassy, sees more than 37 start ups working alongside each other, being offered mentoring from both Dutch and Greek professionals, and links them to financial aid from big business.

The Dutch government is so impressed with the initiative that it’s looking to introduce Orange Groves in other embassies around the world.

“I go there and give talks every few weeks, they bring in people from Dutch universities, we do a ‘Dragons Den’ every few weeks where we just pull these kids to pieces, we marry them up with finance people, I mean it’s a really good incubator,” Mr Economides says.

He believes the initiative answers a big need, something that the Greek government has been slow to encourage.

Fostering these hubs will create a brand new, creatively mature nation, and will open up trade options with countries and their businesses.

That is where Mr Economides believes the disapora can be very useful. Creating business connections with these start ups won’t be charity, but rather a mutually useful tool for companies to expand into a European market.

He is already seeing a shift with big Greek companies, who are adapting to their shrinking Greek market share and are looking to global markets to supplement their brands.

‘I think they’re realising that it’s not a question of taking a Greek product and simply going and selling it abroad, they have to really take something and which will have demand and real consumer relevance assured,” he says.

“Well-established Greek companies, who are very good at doing what they’re doing now turning seriously and looking at global markets.’

The only concerning factor for Mr Economides is the mass exodus of young Greek creatives. The lack of opportunities in Greece has seen thousands seek better fortunes in more stable countries like Australia and the US.

The only way he believes the young will feel secure in their own country is to believe in a realistic ideal.

“I think the way to get them to stop leaving is to give them a vision that a young person can buy and say ‘Yes, I believe in that’,” he says.

“It needs initiatives like the Dutch initiative but on a bigger scale.”

He wants to see Greece change its brand and adapt it to a new sentiment.

“We can’t be this ouzo slugging character dancing on the beach, but the spirit of that we certainly need,” he says.

“We’re looking for the descendants of Zorba; what we do that separates the Greeks from anyone else are all those elements of focusing on life.”

Mr Economides was in Melbourne this week and hosted two events for the Hellenic Chamber of Commerce and Industry (HACCI). He will be back in Melbourne in September to launch the Benaki Museum collection at the Hellenic Museum.

source: Neos Kosmos

 

Greece: Banks can seize deposits for debts

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The Council of State in Greece.

Council of State says no notification to account holders is necessary.

The Greek state and insurance funds have the right to seize bank account deposits for debts owed to them without informing the account holder, the Council of State, the country’s supreme administrative court ruled this week.

In an irrevocable decision that overturns earlier rulings, the Council of State said that informing account holders of the intention to seize deposits would defeat the purpose.

“Were the (account) owner notified of the measure, s/he would rush to withdraw the funds from the third party (the bank)” or s/he “would transfer their assets to another party”, it said.

The court ruled that the lack of notification did not violate constitutional rules. It said debtors were well aware when payment deadlines had passed and warned that the use of “obligatory measures” against them to collect debts was possible once the deadline passed.

The ruling arose from case taken by the CEO of a now defunct company, which owed €565,393 to the Social Security Foundation (IKA), the country’s largest social insurance fund. The tax office authorised the recovery of the debt and proceeded to withdraw the funds from the account into which the CEO’s pension was paid without informing him. He only found out about the seizure nine months later when he went to withdraw funds.

In a decision in March, a section of the Council of State had ruled the seizures were illegal if the state did not inform the account owner.

This week’s decision, however, reverses this judgement.

Source: enetenglish, ana-mpa

Council of State says no notification to account holders is necessary.

 

Greece: Property prices plummet

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Greece recorded one of the biggest property price falls in the world at the end of 2013, according to the IMF.

IMF report finds it is better to buy rather than rent in Greece.

IMF’s ‘Global Housing Watch’ says that a typical upscale housing unit of 100 m2 in Greece was only slightly out of reach of average household incomes, but were much more affordable than in places like Belgium, Canada, Australia or the UK.

Greece recorded the second biggest decline in real estate prices in the world in the fourth quarter of 2013, the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday.

In a report called ‘Global Housing Watch’, the IMF said the biggest decline worldwide was in India (-9.1 per cent), followed by Greece (-7.02 per cent), Italy (-6.54 per cent), Cyprus (-6.48 per cent) and Croatia (-6.35 per cent).

On the other hand, the Philippines (10.56 per cent), Hong Kong (10.25 per cent), New Zealand (9.1 per cent), China (9.1 per cent) and Colombia (8.1 per cent) saw their real estate prices increase in the same period.

The report said that a typical upscale housing unit of 100 m2 was only slightly out of reach of average household incomes, but was much more affordable than in places like Belgium, Canada, Australia or the UK.

The report also found that the house price-to-rent ratio in Greece was -16.3 per cent below the average. In other words, it makes more sense to buy a home than to rent it. In Canada, on the other hand, the current ratio is about 86.7 per cent, meaning it makes the most sense to rent.

Source: enetenglish, ana-mpa

 

Incoming senators under pressure: Tony Abbott reintroduces carbon tax repeal bills

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Prime Minister Tony Abbott has set up the axing of the carbon tax as one of the first debates of the new Senate, reintroducing a bill to repeal the tax into the House of Representatives.

He has called on the Federal Parliament to quickly “scrap this toxic tax”, putting pressure on incoming crossbench senators who take their places on July 1.

The government’s bill to repeal Labor’s carbon price was reintroduced on Monday, three months after Labor and the Greens first used their numbers to defeat the bill in the Senate.

Mr Abbott said earlier on Monday that he expected the new senators to support the scrapping of the tax and “urgently” pass the abolition bill after July 1.

“The people have spoken and now it’s up to this Parliament to show it listened,” Mr Abbott told the Parliament.

“The Australian people passed their judgment on the carbon tax.”

Mr Abbott said his government had set down a “visionary” budget for Australia, but scrapping the carbon tax was a “cornerstone” for achieving its plan for a stronger economy.

Palmer United Party leader Clive Palmer, whose three senators will share the balance of power in the new Senate, said he will announce his party’s final position on the carbon tax on Wednesday.

Speaking to reporters during a visit to a Canberra school on Monday, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said Labor had made it clear it would only support the repeal of the carbon tax if it was replaced by ”an effective policy”.

”I don’t think anyone thinks that this smelly bag of fish called the Direct Action policy, a multibillion-dollar boondoogle to hide the fact that they’re climate sceptics, satisfies anyone,” he said.

”How in good conscience when we meet these lovely children today, how can we say to them in the years to come that we were in a Parliament that did nothing about climate change?”

The government also reintroduced bills on Monday to abolish the Climate Change Authority and the mining tax as it sets about making the dismantling of the previous government’s carbon laws one of the first items of business for the new Senate.

The government is facing a fight on some measures after the current Senate created a double dissolution trigger by voting down a bill to abolish the Clean Energy Finance Corporation for the second time last week.

That bill is also being reintroduced, but its success could hinge on the vote of one senator – incoming Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party senator Ricky Muir.

Mr Abbott’s declaration that voters had passed their judgment on the carbon tax comes as an annual poll by The Climate Institute found that for the first time more Australians support Australia’s carbon pricing laws than oppose them.

The poll found that the number of Australians who disagree with the laws fell to 30 per cent, down from 52 per cent in 2012, when the Coalition’s attack on the carbon tax was at its peak. It also represents an 11 per cent decline in opposition from last year.

At the same time the percentage of Australians who supported the carbon price rose 6 per cent to 34 per cent over the past year. It is the first rise in support under the Climate Institute poll since the laws were introduced by the Gillard government.

But more people were indifferent than supportive or opposed, with 36 per cent saying they neither agreed nor disagreed with the laws.

The poll – carried out by JWS Research, which surveyed 1100 people online late last month – also found just 22 per cent of people supported the government’s Direct Action scheme, which will replace the carbon tax.

source: smh.com.au