Monthly Archives: February 2015

Σόιμπλε: Θα δυσκολευτούν να εξηγήσουν τη συμφωνία στους Έλληνες

Σόιμπλε: Θα δυσκολευτούν να εξηγήσουν τη συμφωνία στους Έλληνες

«Για όσο το πρόγραμμα δεν έχει ολοκληρωθεί επιτυχώς δεν θα υπάρξει καμία εκταμίευση» δήλωσε ο γερμανός υπουργός Οικονομικών Βόλφγκανγκ Σόιμπλε σε συνέντευξη Τύπου μετά την ολοκλήρωση του Eurogroup.

«Το να είσαι στην κυβέρνηση είναι ένα ραντεβού με την πραγματικότητα, και η πραγματικότητα πολλές φορές δεν είναι τόσο όμορφη όσο τα όνειρα» δήλωσε ο γερμανός πολιτικός, προσθέτοντας ότι ο ίδιος μπορεί να υποστηρίξει τη συμφωνία που επιτεύχθηκε.

Ο Σόιμπλε, όμως, πρόσθεσε: «Οι Έλληνες σίγουρα θα έχουν μία δυσκολία να εξηγήσουν τη συμφωνία στους ψηφοφόρους τους».

Ο ίδιος πρόσθεσε για τη συμφωνία ότι επί του παρόντος «βρισκόμαστε στη διαδικασία οικοδόμησης εμπιστοσύνης. Επομένως υπάρχουν αυστηροί όροι».

Πηγή:in.gr

Ισπανία:Στο +4 χωρίς να φορτσάρει η Ρεάλ, νίκες για Βιγιαρεάλ, Μπιλμπάο

Στο +4 χωρίς να φορτσάρει η Ρεάλ, νίκες για Βιγιαρεάλ, Μπιλμπάο

Χωρίς να «πατήσει γκάζι» η Ρεάλ Μαδρίτης επιβλήθηκε 2-0 εκτός έδρας της Έλτσε και ξέφυγε με 4 βαθμούς από τη Μπαρτσελόνα στην κούρσα του τίτλου της πριμέρα ντιβιζιό, στο πλαίσιο της 24ης αγωνιστικής.

Μετά από ένα εκπληκτικό ματς στο «Ανοέτα», η Σοσιεδάδ με γκολ του Τσάμπι Πριέτο στο 90΄ επικράτησε της Σεβίλης 4-3.

Οι Ανδαλουσιάνοι, που είχαν αρκετά παράπονα από τη διαιτησία, βρέθηκαν δύο φορές πίσω στο σκορ, επέστρεψαν και προηγήθηκαν 3-2, αλλά το αυτογκόλ του Αρίμπας στο 83΄ και η κεφαλιά του Τσάμπι Πριέτο στο 90΄ τους υποχρέωσαν σε ήττα και τους άφησαν πέντε βαθμούς πίσω από την τέταρτη της κατάταξης Βαλένθια.

Οι Βάσκοι από την πλευρά τους πανηγύρισαν την έκτη φετινή εντός έδρας νίκη τους (σε 13 ματς), εκ των οποίων οι τέσσερις είναι επί ομάδων της πρώτης πεντάδας (Ρεάλ, Μπαρτσελόνα και Ατλέτικο τα προηγούμενα… θύματα)!

Η Βιγιαρεάλ επιβλήθηκε 1-0 της Εϊμπάρ στο «Μαδριγάλ», ενώ με γκολ του Αντούριθ στο τέλος της αναμέτρησης η Αθλέτικ Μπιλμπάο επιβλήθηκε 1-0 της Ράγιο Βαγιεκάνο και πήρε βαθιά βαθμολογική ανάσα.

Τα αποτελέσματα και οι σκόρερ:

Χετάφε-Εσπανιόλ 2-1
(57΄ Βάθκεθ, 89΄ Αρμπίγια – 33΄ Σαράμπια)

Μπαρτσελόνα-Μάλαγα 0-1
(7΄ Χουάνμι)

Κόρντομπα-Βαλένθια 1-2
(74΄πεν. Γκιλάς – 38΄ Γκόμες, 81΄ Πιάτι)

Ατλέτικο Μαδρίτης-Αλμερία 3-0
(13΄πεν. Μάντζουκιτς, 20΄, 29΄ Γκριζμάν)

Λα Κορούνια-Θέλτα 0-2
(46΄ Τσάρλες, 82΄ Λαριβέι)

Σοσιεδάδ-Σεβίλη 4-3
(16΄ Αγκιρέτσε, 48΄πεν., 90΄ Τσάμπι Πριέτο, 83΄αυτ. Αρίμπας – 43΄ Κολοτζιέτζακ, 68΄ Μπάκα, 78΄πεν. Γκαμεϊρό)

Αθλέτικ Μπιλμπάο-Ράγιο Βαγεκάνο 1-0
(86΄ Αντούριθ)

Βιγιαρεάλ-Εϊμπάρ 1-0
(72΄ Βιέτο)

Ελτσε-Ρεάλ Μαδρίτης 0-2
(56΄ Μπενζεμά, 69΄ Κρ. Ρονάλντο)

Λεβάντε-Γρανάδα 23/02

ΒΑΘΜΟΛΟΓΙΑ (σε 24 αγώνες)

Ρεάλ Μαδρίτης 60
Μπαρτσελόνα 56
Ατλέτικο Μαδρίτης 53
Βαλένθια 50
Σεβίλη 45
Βιγιαρεάλ 44
Μάλαγα 38
Θέλτα 31
Εσπανιόλ 29
Εϊμπάρ 27 -23αγ.
Σοσιεδάδ 27
Αθλέτικ Μπιλμπάο 27
Ράγιο Βαγιεκάνο 26
Χετάφε 26
Λα Κορούνια 24
Αλμερία 23
Έλτσε 23
Λεβάντε 19 -23αγ.
Γρανάδα 19 -23αγ.
Κόρντομπα 18

Πηγή:in.gr

Apokries – carnival through the ages

Apokries - carnival through the ages

Apokries is a crazy and fun festival loved by tourists and locals.

While many will know of the Patra Carnival, the Tyrvanos celebrations are more authentic to the origins of Apokries.

The word Αποκριά or Απόκρεω (Apokria) literally means ‘without meat’ and the word carnival comes from the Latin ‘carnem levare’ meaning ‘without meat’. So what we are doing within this merriment today is preparing to fast during the Lent which follows, but the origins of this revelry can be traced in Greek paganism.

Apokries last for three weeks prior to Lent and covers twenty-two days and three Sundays.

First Sunday is the Sunday of the Prodigal son
Second Sunday is the Sunday of Small Carnival
Third Sunday is the Sunday of the Big Carnival (Shrovetide Sunday)

Or in Greek:
Κυριακή του Ασώτου
Κυριακή της Απόκρεω (μικρή αποκριά)
Κυριακή της Τυρινής (Μεγαλη Αποκριά)
This is called the Triodio (Τριώδιο)

Having lived in Greece for many years I found Apokries my favourite festive season because, apart from the organised carnival in Patra, every other celebration all over Greece seems truer to the origins. The Patra Carnival is the most famous one but also the most westernised, whereas the Tyrvanos celebrations are more authentic to the origins of Apokries. In Athens people have masquerade parties and the goal is to dress up so as not to be recognised. People wander the streets dressed in masquerade garb, hitting strangers on the head with a club (naturally only a plastic club). Friends get together and knock on other friends’ doors in dress-up and in this case as well as at a party one must guess who is hiding behind the dress-up and the mask.

To understand this festive season one has to look deep into antiquity to the Dionysian festivals and the celebration of rebirth. It is spring time and all over Greece it was important to honour Dyonisus, these festivities were held late February early March, the celebrations were over a period of three days whereas today it is over three weeks. In Athens, on the first day they would open the jars of the new wine and made libations to Dyonisus, singing to thank the god for the wine and on this day the Athenians allowed their slaves to drink with them.

On the second day there was a procession of entry to the city of Dynonisus on a boat with wheels, on the boat there were people disguised as Satyrs teasing the people with profanities creating joy. Other Satyrs were dressed in animal skins or evergreen plants and one man aimed to look like a billy goat with a high propensity to sexuality; this male goat symbolised the god Dionysus who was ‘married off’ to the wife of the archon of the city in a ‘sacred marriage’.

On the third day koliva (κόλυβα) were dedicated to the god Hermes, who accompanied the souls to the after-life and by doing this it was believed that the departed souls came back amongst the living on this day. But it was feared that dark souls would came back from Hades so the people surrounded their sacred places with a red thread, thus preventing them from entering.

While the list of what went on in these three days is vast, I have tried to give a short version so as to connect with what happens today in the modern version of Apokries.

Today the northern Greeks seem to be the custodians of the Dionysian rites. The material I have found tells that the celebrations are ‘muted’ today but I gather that this means that with Lent and Easter around the corner some things have changed but from my personal experience in Greece and my research the bawdy aspect has not changed much. There is demotic music that is only sung during the Apokries festivities. Domna Samiou was the greatest exponent of this music and the music can be found under ‘Ta Apokriatika’. I have the songs and they are seriously naughty and hilarious.

There are festivals all over Greece all taking different forms, I will mention only some of the most famous ones to give my readers an idea and I’ll start with Naxos, considered to be the birthplace of the god Dionysus. Each year, on the last Sunday of Apokries, Koudounati, men strapped with bells and carrying Dionysian phallic symbols known locally as somba (σόμπα), stir up a racket while parading through the village alleys in a procession held to welcome the spring season and exorcise evil spirits. The procession winds up at the village main square, where its participants join forces with other carnival-dressed revellers. Together, they plunge into celebration with singing and dance accompanied by traditional bagpipe (tsabouna – τσαμπούνα) and percussion (toumbaki – τουμπάκι) sounds for a party that lasts well into the night.

On the island of Skyros there is the ‘Geros’ and the ‘Korela’ and the ‘Frangos’. The Geros wears the typical woollen cape of a shepherd turned inside out, with the hairy side outward, and a mask made of small animal pelt that covers the face. The hood of the cape covers the head and he wears white woollen pants and white woven socks. His back is stuffed to create the impression of a hump. In one hand he holds a wooden curved shepherd’s stick and in the other a bag with flour or bran, necessary for his encounter with the people on the way to the square. But what is supposed to spread fear is the sound of 50-60 bells that are fastened with wooden hoops through a rope around his waist as in the Koudounati of Naxos.

The Geros is accompanied by the Korela, a man dressed in women’s traditional attire from Skyros. The performer who completes the cast is the Frangos, a young man dressed in old ‘European’ clothes. On his waist he has a shepherd’s bell while he teases people who are passing by.

There are many festivities all over Greece but the one that stands for me as being the closest to the Dionysian rites is the Apokries of Tyrnavo in Thessaly,
northern Greece.

The festival in Tyrnavos is one of the most famous carnivals in Greece. Faithful to the old traditions, the people of Tyrnavos still honour the god Dionysus with various festivities. Perhaps the most obviously pagan of these is found under the misleading name ‘cooking the bourani’, a vegetable soup, which is served on Ash Monday every year and brings a lot of Greek and foreign tourists in the area. During the cooking of the soup, the ‘bourani people’ do a lot of teasing with phallic symbols, while phallic objects are paraded through the town. This Apokries celebration in Tyrnavos is wild fun. There are people against it and during the dictatorship of 1969 – 1973 this festival was banned, but the festival has survived and every year, on Ash Monday, the town of Tyrnavos is jam-packed with fun-loving participants and spectators. People of all ages, Greeks and foreigners, participate.

The festival began centuries, if not millennia, ago. History is full of festivals associated with fertility symbols. Some archaeologists think that fertility rites are one of the oldest forms of religious rites in Greece.

Today Apokria ends on Clean Monday (Καθαρή Δευτέρα) the first day of Lent, which begins the 40-day fast until Easter Sunday. On Clean Monday, the koulouma (κούλουμα) are held where everybody goes off to the countryside, eats Lenten food and flies kites.

The recipes I’ve included are for those considering fasting during this time.

ΚΑΛΕΣ ΑΠΟΚΡΙΕΣ

source: Neos Kosmos

Panathinaikos wins derby to dispute Olympiakos’ supremacy

Panathinaikos wins derby to dispute Olympiakos' supremacy

Olympiakos goes down 2-1 thanks to Panathinaikos hit.

The Red’s lead diminished to only three points after Panathinaikos win the derby 2-1.

Panathinaikos downed Olympiakos 2-1 at home on Sunday to get to within three points from its archrival at the summit of the Super League after comprehensively outplaying the champion and only conceding a goal with the last kick of the game.

The Greens took full advantage of the tired legs of their visitors, who were still smarting from their 2-0 loss in Ukraine three days earlier. They outran Olympiakos in the first half and had them exhausted in the second, forcing them to commit serious errors in defense, to the extent that the final score appeared flattering for the Reds.

Four minutes after the interval Danijel Pranjic crossed the ball toward Marcus Berg, when Olympiakos defender Arthur Masuaku tried to intervene only to send the ball into his own team’s net.

Half an hour later it was 2-0 as Mladen Petric was once again the match winner for Panathinaikos with a low shot to the left-hand corner of goalkeeper Roberto.

The only thing Olympiakos could do was to grab a consolation goal through a free-kick by substitute Chori Dominguez two minutes past the time added on.

Olympiakos has a three-point advantage and its run-in appears easier compared with that of Panathinaikos, so it remains the favorite for the title.

Third-placed PAOK scored a 3-1 win at Veria to put previous poor performances behind it and cut the distance from the top to eight points. Facundo Perreira, Miguel Vitor and Cristian Noboa scored for the Thessaloniki giant, all in the first half, while Nicolao Dumitru pulled one back for the host.

Asteras Tripolis is now alone in fourth after thrashing hapless OFI 6-1 at home, as Panetolikos shared a goalless draw with host Panthrakikos at Komotini to drop to fifth.

Panionios scored a precious 1-0 victory over fellow struggling Levadiakos at home to crawl away from the drop zone.

In other games Kalloni beat PAS Giannina 1-0 on Lesvos and Platanias drew 1-1 with Kerkyra at Hania.

source: Neos Kosmos

Sydney helping Greece to breathe

Sydney helping Greece to breathe

Greek Australians attend a rally organised by the Australia-Greece Solidarity Campaign group.

Greek Australians in Sydney have rallied in support of Greece’s efforts to renegotiate their debt.

The weekend that passed for the Sydney Greek Community proved to be an exceptional one. With the success of the ‘parelasi’ at Darling Harbour to open the 33rd Greek Festival of Sydney, another success was emerging.

Any one of the tens of thousands who made it out to Tumbalong Park at Darling Harbour on February 14 and 15 would have seen the poignant message on a banner to the side of the main stage. ‘Let Greece Breathe’, the banner screamed. With a puff of air as the sole image to accompany the slogan, few people could be mistaken about what the banner was trying to state.

On the other side of the festival, along the main walk up to Tumbalong Park, you could find a stall that was gathering signatures for the campaign.

Hundreds, probably more than a thousand, had signed up and pledged to help promote the message. They want Greece to breathe.

Over 200 of them turned up on Monday 16 February at Town Hall in the heart of the CBD to rally in support of Greece, to show their disappointment in the treatment of Greece by the EU, the IMF, and a number of other key stakeholders.

The rally held in Sydney reinforced the message heard at the festival. The rally was organised by the Australia-Greece Solidarity Campaign. Coordinator Mr Adam Rorris, an education economist, told me that the rally is an opportunity for people in Australia to show their support for “Greece as it fights for a fair and sustainable deal on debt. A deal to allow its people to live with their dignity and a reasonable hope for their future”.

“When a country has under the duress of it lenders implemented policies that have seen it lose 25 per cent of its GDP, rendered half its youth unemployed, destroyed its health system and produced child malnutrition rates not seen since the German occupation, you know that it’s time to change course.” Mr Rorris told Neos Kosmos.

The rally heard from Mr Harry Danalis, president of the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW, Angelo Gavrielatos, the former president of the Education Union, Ms Maria Mouratida, a young person recently arrived from Greece, as well as Mr Rorris.

Their message was clear and unequivocal. They believe that the new Greek government that was elected last month has a mandate to change the ‘course’ and the international agencies are beholden to recognise the will of the Greek people and her supporters overseas.

The campaign will continue to breathe in the coming weeks, with a speech and discussion event to be held at the University of Sydney on 10 March, a significant institution, as this is where Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis taught for a decade.

source: Neos Kosmos

Australia:Murdoch pushes Grexit

Murdoch pushes Grexit

Tweeter Rupert Murdoch, executive chairman of News Corporation. Photo AP/Jason Reed

Media tycoon tweets on Greece’s eurozone credentials

News Corp patriarch Rupert Murdoch weighed into the debate around Greece’s discussions with eurozone finance ministers last week, taking to Twitter to reveal his musings that Greece was the European Union’s “big problem”, and that the EU “should let [it] default and go”.

The global media tycoon added that Greece contributed “only one per cent of the EU’s economy” but that it was a “big piece of the Med to fall to Russian influence”.

The twitterings of the 84-year-old media mogul have become something of a phenomenon since he opened his account three years ago; a window into the private and politically sensitive thoughts of one of the most influential men on earth.

Before social media he was known for keeping in the background and avoiding airing his own views publicly, all the while seeking to sway elections and policies through the editorial of his news media across the world.

But today the octogenarian (worth is reportedly worth over $13bn) is happy to share his not inconsiderable opinions with 562,000 followers and through them, millions more.

Highlights from Mr Murdoch’s colourful tweeting history include the one where he insulted an entire nation – the UK, on the occasion of a public holiday.

“Maybe Brits have too many holidays for a broke country!” said the man who played no small role in the victories of successive British prime ministers from the 1980s onwards.

In less than 140 characters, Mr Murdoch’s tweets have gone on to push his forthright views on – amongst other subjects – Mitt Romney’s suitability for the Republican US presidential candidacy, Tony Abbott’s performance (and the need for Peta Credlin to be sacked) and the removal of the British monarchy.
Unfiltered, Mr Murdoch’s ponderings have at times, caused offence on a global scale.

One recent tweet gained immediate notoriety when he delved into definitions of Islamic extremism.

“Maybe most Moslems peaceful, but until they recognize and destroy their growing jihadist cancer they must be held responsible,” he tweeted in January.

The notion that all muslims should be held responsible for the actions of a tiny minority was widely condemned.

Perhaps Margaret Simons, director of the Centre for Advancing Journalism at the University of Melbourne put it best in her interview with The Guardian last month.

“Twitter has been very bad for him,” said Simons. “It has revealed something that those closest to him have always known: that his personal politics, and the way he intervenes in politics, are quite crude. It’s there for everyone to see now: Rupert Murdoch is not the world’s deepest thinker.”

source: Neos Kosmos

No feelgood victory for Germany in debt clash with Greece

Germany’s 7-1 drubbing of Brazil in the football World Cup last summer was uncomfortable to watch, even for jubilant Germans whose cheers turned to sheepish smiles as the goals piled up.

The bailout extension deal that Germany and its European partners clinched with Greece on Friday after weeks of public jousting between the countries had a similar feel.

In the end, it looked like a total triumph for the Germans, who forced Alexis Tsipras, Greece’s new leftist prime minister, to swallow virtually all of their demands.

But it was not a feel-good victory, nor one that bodes well for a single currency bloc struggling to emerge from a half-decade of financial and economic crisis, and increasingly threatened by populist political forces on the right and left.

Tsipras and his Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, a charismatic economist with a passion for Karl Marx and flair for rhetoric, clearly overplayed their hands.

Their pledge to roll back German-ordered austerity and keep Greece in the euro always looked unrealistic.

One of those promises would have to go, and with a solid majority of Greeks keen to stay in the currency bloc, it should have been clear which would crumble.

Still, it is hard to avoid the sense that Germany also may have gone too far.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble’s public rejection of a Greek proposal surprised euro zone partners as well as cabinet colleagues in Berlin, including Chancellor Angela Merkel.

It was not Schaeuble’s objections to the draft which were problematic, but his decision to go public at such a sensitive point rather than do so behind closed doors.

That meant the Greeks could not climb down without a near-total loss of face. On Friday, once they had buckled, Schaeuble rubbed it in again, saying: «The Greeks will certainly have a difficult time explaining this deal to their voters.”

Tsipras tried to spin the deal as a victory, describing it to Greeks in an address to the nation as a step towards leaving behind austerity, the bailouts and the dreaded troika — the European and IMF officials who monitor Greek reform progress.

“We won a battle, not the war,» Tsipras said.

Beaten and bewildered

In truth, like the Brazilian football team last summer, the Greeks emerged beaten and bewildered from their tussle with Germany.

Marcel Fratzscher, a leading German economist, said this was neither a good outcome for Greece nor for Germany and Europe. In football terms, a 3-1 victory would have been better for all involved.

“The Greek government will only be able to tackle difficult reforms in the coming months if it saves face and its credibility,» wrote Fratzscher in German weekly Die Zeit.

Syriza’s far-left radical wing has so far been silent on the concessions Tsipras swallowed to reach a deal. But that could change, threatening the cohesion of an unwieldy coalition government.

“What will be crucial in the next four months is whether Greeks develop the sense that it’s their government that has the upper hand in policymaking or whether it is the foreign institutions that are ordering it around,» said Costas Panagopoulos, of Greek polling group Alco.

Tsipras was right that the deal was just one of the many battles his government must fight in the months ahead.

On Monday, it must submit a list of planned reforms, which require approval by the troika before national parliaments can vote on new loans to Athens.

At the end of April, the troika will rule on whether the government has implemented the reforms and whether Athens receives the last of its aid tranche.

In June, the extended second bailout programme expires, giving Greece and Tsipras a chance to go it alone. But with billions of euros in bond repayments due this summer, a third bailout programme, with new budget and reform conditions, cannot be ruled out.

Deeply strained ties between Athens and Berlin will not make these negotiations easy.

“Grexident”

According to some officials in Brussels, the relationship between Schaeuble and Varoufakis may be beyond repair after the Greek minister’s suggestion at a joint news conference this month that German austerity policies were leading to the rise of Nazis in Greece.

Officials in Berlin deny Schaeuble was bothered by those comments or by a Nazi caricature of him that appeared in a newspaper close to the ruling Syriza party.

But they acknowledge a complete breakdown in trust.

“It will be difficult to build this up again,» said one official, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

“Schaeuble believes if a country doesn’t respect the rules we are better off without them,» the official added. «We can’t have a situation where we are constantly having to spend our time on a country that makes up 2 percent of the bloc’s GDP.”

Schaeuble’s stance was praised in conservative German media.

“Finally someone has said no to the bankrupt Greeks,» read a headline in Germany’s top-selling Bild newspaper on Friday. «Germany says thank you, Wolfgang Schaeuble!”

But it is likely to add to fears of what sociologist Ulrich Beck has called a «German Europe», in which a reluctant Berlin wields an economic rule book to assert its influence over its partners.

Schaeuble’s handling of the crisis has also raised questions, notably among Social Democrats in the ruling coalition, about how much Merkel, who has been devoting huge amounts of her time to the Ukraine crisis, can afford to delegate an issue as sensitive as Greece.

Their fear is that more clashes could lead to what some are calling a «Grexident» — accidental Greek exit from the euro sparked by inflammatory rhetoric that shakes financial markets and triggers a run on Greek banks.

“We may have come very close to this scenario last week,» the German official said.

Πηγή:in.gr

Greece readies reform promises after Eurogroup climbdown

Greece’s government prepared reform measures on Sunday to secure a financial lifeline from the euro zone, but was attacked for selling «illusions» to voters after failing to keep a promise to extract the country from its international bailout.

Leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has insisted Greece achieved a negotiating success when euro zone finance ministers agreed to extend the bailout deal for four months, provided it came up with a list of reforms by Monday.

Greeks reacted with relief that Friday’s deal averted a banking crisis which fellow euro zone member Ireland said could have erupted in the coming week. This means Tsipras has stood by one promise at least: to keep the country in the euro zone.

Tsipras maintains he has the nation behind him despite staging a climbdown in Brussels. Under the deal, Greece will still live under the EU/IMF bailout which he had pledged to scrap, and must negotiate a new programme by the early summer.

“I want to say a heartfelt thanks to the majority of Greeks who stood by the Greek government … That was our most powerful negotiating weapon,» he said on Saturday. «Greece achieved an important negotiating success in Europe.».

Top Marxist members of Tsipras’s Syriza party, a broad coalition of the left, have so far been silent on the painful compromises made to win agreement from the Eurogroup.

But veteran leftist Manolis Glezos attacked the failure to fulfil campaign promises. «I apologise to the Greek people because I took part in this illusion,» he wrote in a blog. «Syriza’s friends and supporters … should decide if they accept this situation.”

Glezos, a Syriza member of the European Parliament, is not a party heavyweight. But he commands moral authority: as a young man under the World War Two occupation, he scaled the Acropolis to rip down a Nazi flag under the noses of German guards and hoist the Greek flag, making him a national hero.

A government official said Glezos «may not be well informed on the tough and laborious negotiation which is continuing».

Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said the reform promises would be ready on Sunday and submitted to Greece’s EU and IMF partners in good time. «We are very confident that the list is going to be approved by the institutions and therefore we are embarking upon a new phase of stabilisation and growth,» he told reporters late on Saturday.

A government official said the reforms would include a crackdown on tax evasion and corruption.

The Brussels deal opens the possibility of lowering a target for the Greek primary budget surplus, which excludes debt repayments, freeing up some funds to help ease the effects of 25 percent unemployment and pension cuts. It also avoids some language which has inflamed many Greeks, angered by four years of austerity demanded by foreign creditors.

Troika no more?

In the deal the hated «troika» of inspectors from the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF, which monitors compliance with Greek bailout undertakings, is referred to as «the three institutions».

Tsipras declared Greece was «leaving austerity, the bailouts and the troika behind». Nevertheless, government plans must still be approved by the re-named troika, although Tsipras won election last month on a pledge to end the humiliation of foreigners dictating Greek economic policy.

The opposition pounced on the climbdown from promises that have raised huge expectations among Greeks. «No propaganda mechanism or pirouette can hide the simple fact that they lied to citizens and sold illusions,» said Evangelos Venizelos, leader of the socialist PASOK party.

Venizelos was deputy prime minister in the last conservative-led coalition which succeeded in raising funds from financial markets with two bond issues last year. With the economy showing signs of growth after a depression which wiped a quarter off GDP, it had prepared to exit the bailout programme but lost power to Syriza on Jan. 25.

Friday’s agreement merely buys time for Greece to seek a long-term deal with the Eurogroup. Euro zone members Ireland and Portugal have already exited their bailouts, but Greece faces yet another programme – on top of bailouts in 2010 and 2011 totalling 240 billion euros – when the extension expires.

“Once you get them into the safe space for the next four months, there’ll be another set of discussions which will effectively involve the negotiation of a third programme for Greece,» Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan said on Saturday.

Tsipras did much of the negotiating for the deal rather than Greece’s Eurogroup representative, Varoufakis. But sources close to the government said this reflected Tsipras’s need to win backing from Syriza’s left wing and his right-wing coalition partner, the Independent Greeks party.

Their support will be crucial in maintaining government unity during negotiations for the long-term agreement.

Likewise Tsipras needs to keep public support. Costas Panagopoulos, who heads the Alco polling firm, said the initial reaction was relief that Greece would stay in the euro. Greeks might even accept Tsipras’s change in language and assertions that the troika is no more. «It may sound odd but this could turn into political gains,» he told Reuters.

source: ekathimerini.com

Μαρινάκης: «Ζήσαμε μια κτηνωδία στη Λεωφόρο»

Μαρινάκης: «Ζήσαμε μια κτηνωδία στη Λεωφόρο»

Ο πρόεδρος του Ολυμπιακού, Βαγγέλης Μαρινάκης, αποχωρεί με την ιδιωτική του ασφάλεια να τον προστατεύει από διάφορα αντικείμενα…

Βαριές κουβέντες βγήκαν από το στόμα του προέδρου του Ολυμπιακού, Βαγγέλη Μαρινάκη, μετά το τέλος του ντέρμπι με τον Παναθηναϊκό στη Λεωφόρο. Ο αρχηγός αποστολής των Πειραιωτών μίλησε στην κάμερα της nova και εξαπέλυσε δριμιά επίθεση προς τις αρχές του ποδοσφαίρου (κυρίως τη Σούπερ Λιγκ), αλλά και τη διοίκηση του Παναθηναϊκού, χαρακτηρίζοντας τις συνθήκες στο γήπεδο ως… κτηνωδία!

«Αυτά που έγιναν σήμερα στη Λεωφόρο, είχα να τα δω από τότε που… βομβάρδιζαν το Ιράκ. Συλλυπητήρια σε όσους διοικούν το ελληνικό ποδόσφαιρο. Αυτό που ζήσαμε ήταν μια κτηνωδία, ήταν ξεφτίλα. Οι παίκτες μας χτυπήθηκαν και δεν μπορούσαν να παίξουν μπάλα κάτω από αυτές τις συνθήκες. Στο Καραϊσκάκη προστατεύουμε το ποδόσφαιρο και δεν θα γίνουν ποτέ τέτοια πράγματα. Αν χάναμε κάτω από ανθρώπινες συνθήκες, θα δίναμε συγχαρητήρια στον Παναθηναϊκό. Με όσα έγιναν, όμως, δεν χωράει καμία κριτική στον αγώνα».

Πηγή:in.gr

 

Γλέζος: Συγγνώμη που συνήργησα στην ψευδαίσθηση

Γλέζος: Συγγνώμη που συνήργησα στην ψευδαίσθηση

Ο ευρωβουλευτής του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ Μανώλης Γλέζος εξέφρασε τη διαφωνία του με τους χειρισμούς της κυβέρνησης (φωτ. Μ.Μυρίλλας/ SOOC)

«Η μετονομασία της Τρόικας σε Θεσμούς, του Μνημονίου σε Συμφωνία και των Δανειστών σε Εταίρους, όπως και όταν βαφτίζεις το κρέας ψάρι, δεν αλλάζεις την προηγούμενη κατάσταση» αναφέρει ο ευρωβουλευτής του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ Μανώλης Γλέζος σε άρθρο του με τίτλο «Πριν είναι αργά».

Στο ίδιο άρθρο στην ιστοσελίδα της κίνησης «Ενεργοί Πολίτες» ο κ. Γλέζος ζητά συγγνώμη από τον ελληνικό λαό «διότι συνήργησα σε αυτή την ψευδαίσθηση» και καλεί σε αντίδραση: «Όλα τα μέλη, οι φίλοι και οι οπαδοί του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ, σε έκτακτες συνελεύσεις, όλων των βαθμίδων των οργανώσεων να αποφασίσουν αν δέχονται αυτήν την κατάσταση» αναφέρει.

Κυβερνητικές πηγές, σχολιάζοντας το άρθρο του κ. Γλέζου ανέφεραν: «Είναι πιθανόν ο Μανώλης Γλέζος να μην είναι καλά πληροφορημένος για τη σκληρή και επίπονη διαπραγμάτευση η οποία συνεχίζεται. Διαπραγμάτευση για την ανάκτηση της αξιοπρέπειας του ελληνικού λαού».

«Την ώρα που η δύσκολη μάχη βρίσκεται σε εξέλιξη, περιμέναμε μια πιο δίκαιη και νηφάλια αποτίμηση από ένα στέλεχος της εμπειρίας και της διαδρομής του Μανώλη Γλέζου» δήλωσε ο υπουργός Επικρατείας Αλέκος Φλαμπουράρης. Ο ίδιος σημείωσε ότι «πάνω από το 80% του ελληνικού λαού στηρίζει τη διαπραγμάτευση», επικαλούμενος δημοσκόπηση της Public Issue (αφορά την περίοδο 12 – 17 Φεβρουαρίου) η οποία δημοσιεύθηκε στην εφημερίδα Αυγή την Κυριακή.

Δεν είναι όμως, μόνο ο Μ.Γλέζος που αντιδρά στη συμφωνία που επετεύχθη στο Eurogroup. Η κομμουνιστική τάση του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ κάνει λόγο για «συμφωνία υποταγής στους εκβιαστές», ζητά από τους αριστερούς βουλευτές του κόμματος να την καταψηφίσουν, ενώ θέτει θέμα σύγκλησης Συνεδρίου και αλλαγής ηγεσίας του κόμματος.

Παράλληλα, στο πλευρό του Μ.Γλέζου βρέθηκε η Σοφία Σακοράφα, ενώ ο Γιάννης Μηλιός παρέπεμψε στο άρθρο του κ. Γλέζου χωρίς άλλο σχόλιο, δημιουργώντας προβληματισμό για τη στάση του. Τη διαφωνία του με την προσέγγιση Γλέζου εξέφρασε ο Δημήτρης Παπαδημούλης.

Όλο το άρθρο Μ.Γλέζου:

«Η μετονομασία της Τρόικας σε Θεσμούς, του Μνημονίου σε Συμφωνία και των Δανειστών σε Εταίρους, όπως και όταν βαφτίζεις το κρέας ψάρι, δεν αλλάζεις την προηγούμενη κατάσταση.

»Δεν αλλάζεις, βέβαια, και την ψήφο του Ελληνικού Λαού, στις εκλογές της 25 Ιανουαρίου 2015. Ψήφισε αυτό που υποσχέθηκε ο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ: καταργούμε το καθεστώς της λιτότητας, που δεν αποτελεί μόνο στρατηγική της ολιγαρχίας της Γερμανίας και των άλλων δανειστριών χωρών της ΕΕ, αλλά και της ελληνικής ολιγαρχίας.

»Καταργούμε τα Μνημόνια και την Τρόικα, καταργούμε όλους τους νόμους της λιτότητας. Την επομένη των εκλογών με ένα νόμο καταργούμε την Τρόικα και τις συνέπειές της. Πέρασε ένας μήνας κι ακόμα η εξαγγελία να γίνει πράξη.

»Κρίμα και πάλι κρίμα.

»Από την πλευρά μου ΖΗΤΩ ΣΥΓΓΝΩΜΗ από τον Ελληνικό Λαό διότι συνήργησα σ΄αυτή την ψευδαίσθηση.

»Πριν, όμως, προχωρήσει το κακό. Πριν να είναι πολύ αργά, ας αντιδράσουμε.

»Πριν απ΄όλα τα μέλη, οι φίλοι και οι οπαδοί του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ, σε έκτακτες συνελεύσεις, όλων των βαθμίδων των οργανώσεων να αποφασίσουν αν δέχονται αυτήν την κατάσταση.

»Μερικοί υποστηρίζουν, πως σε μια συμφωνία, πρέπει κι εσύ να υποχωρήσεις. Κατ΄αρχήν ανάμεσα σε καταπιεστή και καταπιεζόμενο δεν μπορεί να υπάρξει συμβιβασμός, όπως ακριβώς ανάμεσα στον σκλάβο και στον κατακτητή, λύση είναι μόνο η Λευτεριά.

»Αλλά κι αν δεχτούμε αυτό τον παραλογισμό, ήδη οι παραχωρήσεις που έκαναν οι προηγούμενες μνημονιακές κυβερνήσεις με την ανεργία, τη λιτότητα, τη φτώχεια, τους αυτόχειρες, ξεπερνούν κάθε όριο υποχώρησης.»

Πηγή:in.gr