Daily Archives: March 11, 2015

Australia:Celebs join language fest

Celebs join language fest

Helen Kapalos: “With age I’ve come to fully realise and appreciate the nuances and the cultural strength contained in the words gifted to me by my ancestors…”

Some of Melbourne’s most famous Hellenes are speaking Greek in March.

One week into Speak Greek month, organisers say the project is on track to make a significant impact on how the language is viewed and used in Victoria, and that the project’s mission – to celebrate its use – has attracted global interest.

Project coordinator Mike Zafiropoulos told Neos Kosmos he was “elated” by the project’s progress.

“It is way beyond our expectations. Already we’ve had three major TV channels from Greece reporting it. The media in Greece have embraced the idea enthusiastically,” said Mr Zafiropoulos, who added that diaspora groups in the UK were looking to replicate the project in London.

“Here in Australia we’re getting interest from other states, for instance a school in Perth wants to get involved, so this idea is spreading.”

Mr Zafiropoulos said that early indications show a number of Greek-related organisations in Victoria had begun using the language more in meetings, and language-learning activities in schools had accelerated.

“I know in Victoria that in the first week a number of organisations are using Greek more, and from all accounts a lot of people are using the language more, particularly in schools.”

“We’ll be able to detect just how much more Greek is being spoken because of the project when March is over.”

Meanwhile, celebrities of Greek heritage have rallied to the call, backing the ambitious initiative.

Journalist and broadcaster Helen Kapalos told Neos Kosmos that Speak Greek month was an initiative that couldn’t be closer to her heart.
“I really wish the project every success. Twenty years ago when my dear mum passed away, so did my confident grasp of the Greek language. Sadly I allowed the decline,” she said.

“With age I’ve come to fully realise and appreciate the nuances and the cultural strength contained in the words gifted to me by my ancestors…

“I only wish I’d held up the importance of maintaining my Greek in the same way that I embraced English. It’s hard to admit it, but I was more articulate as a 10-year-old Greek than I am now!”

Last year Ms Kapalos enrolled in adult Greek school to revive her ability in the language.

From the world of professional sport, rising AFL star Jimmy Toumpas – who plays for the Demons – said he would be doing his bit to speak more Greek in the weeks ahead.

“I’m very strong on opening up and sharing where you come from, and the culture you’ve been brought up in. I’m pretty passionate about that stuff,” he told Neos Kosmos.

“You don’t want to forget where your family come from and what they went through to come to Australia – to give you the life you have today.”

Toumpas – who is an AFL multicultural ambassador – said his Greek heritage was often a point of interest for his teammates.

“They ask if I speak Greek. I’m not great at it, but I can speak a bit.”

Asked if he would find a chance to inject Greek into his footy this month, the 21-year-old midfielder is up for it.

“If I called for the ball in Greek during a game it would probably confuse them a bit, but I might use it in training to see how they will react. I’ll give it a go!”

Meanwhile, Australia’s most famous Greek Australian chef, the inimitable George Calombaris, served up his trademark enthusiasm for all things Greek – and the Speak Greek project – in a video promotion on March 1.

“Jeez, I love Australia,” said the flamboyant master chef. “I love what we’re all about, but can I tell you one thing? I’m proud of all the Greeks that came here and put their stamp on this wonderful place, so I declare as of today, for the whole month of March, that we speak Greek. Mιλάμε ελληνικά! Πάμε!”

Speak Greek in March is sponsored by Merino & Jumbuck, the Victorian Multicultural Commission, and Community Languages Australia.

For more info go to www.speakgreekinmarch.com

source:Neos Kosmos

Australia:Churches unite for Sunday of Orthodoxy

Churches unite for Sunday of Orthodoxy

Archbishop Stylianos leads the service alongside other Orthodox clergy.

 Greek, Serbian, Romanian and other Orthodox clergy came together for a special joint service.

Orthodox clergy from all around Sydney came together at the Church of St Nicholas in Marrickville for a special pan-Orthdox service to commemorate the Vespers on the Sunday of Orthodoxy, the first Sunday of Lent.

The special service on March 1 was officiated by Greek Orthodox Archbishop Stylianos, alongside Bishop Irinej of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Bishop Mihail of the Romanian Orthodox Church and Bishop Seraphim of Apollonas.

Hundreds of Greek Australian faithful followed the service alongside fellow Orthodox community members, and watched as the clergy carried icons in a procession to mark the occasion.

After the service, the Greek Orthodox Church of Australia hosted a communal meal, hoping to continue the friendship and solidarity of the Inter-Orthodox faithful.

Pan-Orthodox liturgies are gaining popularity, with the different Orthodox churches jumping at the chance to unite for worthy causes. Last year the Greek Orthodox Church led a pan-Orthodox service to commemorate the lives lost in WWI.

source:Neos Kosmos

The history of fasting

The history of fasting

Hippocrates made fasting a medical treatment.

Greeks have a long history of fasting, but the reasons we do it have drastically changed.

It seems that there has not been any time in human history that we are aware of when humans did not fast. In every written source of all cultures, religions and geography there is mention of fasting. Fasting has been used for health and spirituality. In ancient Egypt, ancient India and ancient Greece fasting was used for curative, preventive health purposes as well as for strengthening of the spirit.

In Greek culture the way we fast today has changed from the way our ancient spiritual forefathers fasted. Today we abstain from animal products, while the ancient Greeks abstained from all food and drank only water. It is well recorded that Pythagoras (580-500BC), the great mathematician and philosopher, systematically starved for 40 days, believing that it increases the mental perception and creativity – a notion that today’s scientists have proven to be so. We also know that Pythagoras and his followers were strict vegetarians.

Plato (427- 347BC), who was a disciple of Socrates, divided medicine into ‘true’ and ‘false’; the ‘true’ being that which gives health which included fasting, air and sun. But it was Hippocrates (460-357BC), the father of modern medicine, who created the Mediterranean diet and who took fasting and food out of the realm of philosophy and made them into a medical must. He said the following about fasting for a sick person – this is only a small extract: “The addition of food should be much rarer, since it is often useful to completely take it away while the patient can withstand it, until the force of the disease reaches its maturity. If the body is cleared the more you feed it the more it will be harmed. When a patient is fed too richly, the disease is fed as well … excess is against nature.”

As a lay person who has no medical training I’d like to draw attention to the fact that when we are sick we lose our appetite, which leads me to conclude that Hippocrates was aware of how nature had tuned the human body.

The ancient Greeks had noticed that periods of fasting would cause seizures in epileptics to become less frequent and less severe. Anticonvulsant drugs did not appear till the 1950s.

Fasting is mentioned in the Bible and does discuss several 40-day fasts including those of Moses and Elijah and that of Jesus. And the indications of the 40-day fast came from the Apostle Paul, who preached the keeping of Passover.

We don’t know exactly when the church adopted what we know now as the 40-day fast before Easter, but we first hear the word Tessarakoste (Τεσσαρακοστή) (see note on Lent) in the early years of the fourth century AD. It occurs in the fifth canon of the council of Nicea (AD325), but is thought to be tied to a festival of Ascension, or the Purification, and is thought not to a period.

The Orthodox Catholic Arnobius (died AD330) warned against the type of fast that the pagans had and warned against Apokries (Mardi Gras). The newfound religion of Christianity systematically destroyed pagan buildings, temples and banned all pagan celebrations. But right through history banning has not worked, and over the centuries Christian customs and previous pagan religious culture intertwined to give us the rich culture we have today.

NOTE: The word ‘Lent’ is a Teutonic word meaning forty days. Lent in the Western Catholic and Protestant religions begins with Ash Wednesday, a day that the Eastern Orthodox Church does not have. Eastern Orthodox fasting before Easter starts on Clean Monday.

source: neos kosmos

Real Madrid 3-4 Schalke (agg 5-4): Blundering Blancos into quarters despite Huntelaar heroics

Real Madrid 3-4 Schalke (agg 5-4): Blundering Blancos into quarters despite Huntelaar heroics

Cristiano Ronaldo netted twice to become the all-time leading goalscorer in European competition but Carlo Ancelotti’s men only scraped through to the last eight.

Real Madrid survived a fraught last five minutes to limp into the Champions League quarter-finals despite a 4-3 home defeat to Schalke on Tuesday.

Former Real forward Klaas-Jan Huntelaar threatened a famous upset with a stunning 85th-minute strike that meant Schalke needed to score just once more to progress on away goals.

The holders’ 2-0 victory in Gelsenkirchen in the first leg ultimately proved enough to see them through 5-4 on aggregate – but the Bernabeu faithful were less than impressed, as they greeted the final whistle with a deafening chorus of jeers as Real’s relative slump in form continued.

Cristiano Ronaldo had twice saved Real in a poor first-half showing as his headers cancelled out goals from Christian Fuchs and Huntelaar – the Portuguese’s double making him the highest goalscorer in European competition.

Karim Benzema put Real ahead on the night shortly after half-time, only for Leroy Sane to curl home an exquisite equaliser for Schalke, before Huntelaar’s superb finish set up a grandstand ending to the game.

Real just about held on to deny Roberto Di Matteo’s impressive Schalke side, but the pressure continues to mount on Carlo Ancelotti after another below-par display.

Ancelotti’s men – who slipped off the top of La Liga at the weekend – were poor from the off, and Schalke capitalised to take a deserved lead in the 20th minute.

Tranquillo Barnetta’s curling cross from the right found Fuchs at the back post and his shot was too powerful for Iker Casillas – who may feel he should have made the save having got two hands on the ball.

The visitors’ joy proved short lived as Real struck back five minutes later, with Toni Kroos’ outswinging corner met by Ronaldo‘s bullet header that flew into the far corner.

Schalke were unfazed, though, and Huntelaar was desperately unlucky to see a stunning 20-yard half-volley rebound off the crossbar before the Dutchman deservedly restored the Bundesliga outfit’s advantage soon after.

Meyer’s original shot was parried by Casillas and Huntelaar pounced to slam home the rebound.

But once again Ronaldo saved Real, their talisman nodding home Fabio Coentrao’s exquisite left-wing delivery just before the break.

Real moved ahead for the first time on the night eight minutes after the break, Benzema showing great composure to beat a couple of defenders and rookie goalkeeper Timon Wellenreuther before tucking into the unguarded goal.

Schalke refused to lie down, though, as teenager Sane marked his European debut with a sublime left-footed effort that curled past a despairing Casillas.

Real responded well, but were made to endure a nervy ending when the returning Luka Modric’s misplaced pass was picked up by Huntelaar, who slammed his shot off the underside of the bar from the edge of the penalty area.

The Bernabeu’s discontent was in full evidence by this point and Casillas prevented a full-on mutiny when he denied Benedikt Howedes in the closing stages, as Real just about survived an almighty scare.

source:goal.com

 

Ιμάμης στο Κουβέιτ καλεί σε καταστροφή των πυραμίδων της Αιγύπτου

Ιμάμης στο Κουβέιτ καλεί σε καταστροφή των πυραμίδων της Αιγύπτου

Ιμάμης στο Κουβέιτ φέρεται να εξέδωσε φετβά που καλεί σε καταστροφή της Σφίγγας και των πυραμίδων της Αιγύπτου.

Σύμφωνα με την αιγυπτιακή εφημερίδα Al – Watan, ο ιμάμης Ιμπραήμ Αλ Καντάρι φέρεται να είπε ότι έχει έρθει η ώρα να εξαλειφθεί η κληρονομιά των φαραώ.

Η φετβά έρχεται την ώρα που στο Ιράκ τζιχαντιστές καταστρέφουν σπουδαίους αρχαιολογικούς χώρους και μνημεία.

«Το γεγονός ότι οι πρώτοι μουσουλμάνοι που ακολουθούσαν τον προφήτη Μωάμεθ δεν κατέστρεψαν τα μνημεία των φαραώ, μόλις εισήλθαν σε αιγυπτιακό έδαφος, δεν σημαίνει ότι δεν πρέπει να το κάνουν τώρα» φέρεται να δήλωσε ο Αλ Καντάρι.

Η εφημερίδα Al Arabiya σημειώνει ότι φετβά που είχε εκδοθεί πριν από δύο χρόνια για το ίδιο θέμα από ιστοσελίδα στο Κατάρ προβλήθηκε έντονα από αιγυπτιακά μέσα ενημέρωσης. Η φετβά αυτή καλούσε τους Αιγύπτιους να καταστρέψουν ιστορικά μνημεία λέγοντας ότι είναι «θρησκευτικό τους καθήκον».

Έκκληση για καταστροφή συμβόλων της Αιγύπτου είχε εκδώσει και ο ηγέτης του Ισλαμικού Κράτους, Αμπού Μπακρ αλ-Μπαγκντάντι, ο οποίος άφησε να εννοηθεί ότι η κατεδάφιση ιστορικών μνημείων αποτελεί «θρησκευτικό καθήκον», ανέφερε η εφημερίδα Al Alam, την οποία επικαλείται το Russia Today.

Τζιχαντιστές κατέστρεψαν σημαντικούς αρχαιολογικούς χώρους στο Ιράκ, υποστηρίζοντας ότι αποτελούν σύμβολα ειδωλολατρίας.

Πηγή:in.gr

Πρόκριση με ήττα και άγχος η Ρεάλ, εύκολα στους «8» η Πόρτο

Πρόκριση με ήττα και άγχος η Ρεάλ, εύκολα στους «8» η Πόρτο

Τέσσερις φορές πανηγύρισε η Σάλκε μέσα στο Μπερναμπέου από όπου έφυγε με τη νίκη, όχι όμως και με την πρόκριση

Πρόκριση στις οκτώ καλύτερες ομάδες αλλά με πολλά… καρδιοχτύπια για τη Ρεάλ Μαδρίτης, που ηττήθηκε με 4-3 από την εκπληκτική Σάλκε στο «Σαντιάγκο Μπερναμπέου» ύστερα από ένα καταπληκτικό παιχνίδι, αλλά η «βασίλισσα» είχε παρακαταθήκη τη νίκη με 2-0 από τον αγώνα στο Γκελζενκίρχεν.

Οι «βασιλικοί μπλε», που μετρούσαν όχι έναν ή δύο αλλά δέκα (!) απόντες, προηγήθηκαν στο 20΄ με διαγώνιο σουτ του Φουκς, αλλά στο 25΄ ο Ρονάλντο ισοφάρισε με κεφαλιά.

Στο 41΄ ο Χούντελαρ έκανε το 1-2 παίρνοντας το ριμπάουντ μετά την απόκρουση του Κασίγιας στο σουτ του Μάγερ, αλλά στο 45΄ ήταν και πάλι ο Ρονάλντο που ισοφάρισε για τους γηπεδούχους.

Ο Μπενζεμά στο 53′ έδωσε για πρώτη φορά προβάδισμα στη Ρεάλ, για να κάνει άμεσα το 3-3 ο Σανέ στο 57΄.

Στο 84′ ο Χούντελααρ έκανε το 3-4 και έβαλε… φωτιά στο ματς αφού η Σάλκε χρειαζόταν άλλο ένα γκολ για την μεγάλη ανατροπή. Ωστόσο, ο… Άγιος Ίκερ Κασίγιας στο 90΄ απέκρουσε στη γωνία του το σουτ του Χέβεντες και έσωσε την ομάδα του από έναν επονείδιστο αποκλεισμό.

ΔΙΑΙΤΗΤΗΣ: Νταμίρ Σκόμινα (Σλοβενία)

ΚΙΤΡΙΝΕΣ: Ρονάλντο, Κοεντράο – Φουκς

ΡΕΑΛ ΜΑΔΡΙΤΗΣ (Κάρλο Αντσελότι): Κασίγιας, Βαράν, Πέπε, Κοεντράο (58΄ Μαρσέλο), Αρμπελόα (83΄ Νάτσο), Κεντίρα (58΄ Μόντριτς), Κρόος, Μπέιλ, Ίσκο, Ρονάλντο, Μπενζεμά

ΣΑΛΚΕ (Ρομπέρτο Ντι Ματέο): Βελενρόιτερ, Χέβεντες, Φουκς, Νάστασιτς, Μάτιπ, Μέγερ, Χέγκερ (57΄ Γκορέτσκα), Μπαρνέτα (81΄ Ουτσίντα), Νοϊστέντερ, Τσούπο-Μοτίνγκ (29΄ Σανέ), Χούντελααρ.

Πόρτο – Βασιλεία 4-0

Η Πόρτο δεν συνάντησε κανένα πρόβλημα στο «Ντραγκάο» απέναντι στη Βασιλεία, της οποίας επικράτησε εύκολα 4-0 και προκρίθηκε στα προημιτελικά, σε συνδυασμό με την ισοπαλία (1-1) του πρώτου αγώνα στο «Σεντ Γιάκομπς Παρκ».

Στο 14΄ ο Μπραχίμι άνοιξε το σκορ με απευθείας εκτέλεση φάουλ, αλλά τρία λεπτά αργότερα ο Ντανίλο συγκρούστηκε με τον Φαμπιάνο, τραυματίστηκε και αποχώρησε από το «Ντραγκάο» σε φορείο και με κολάρο.

Η Πόρτο έφτασε στο 2-0 στο 47΄ με τον Ερέρα, ενώ στο 56΄ ο Κασεμίρο «έγραψε» το 3-0 με φάουλ από περίπου 30 μέτρα (!), για να διαμορφώσει το τελικό 4-0 ο Αμπουμπακάρ στο 75ο λεπτό, κι ενώ στις καθυστερήσεις αποβλήθηκε ο Σάμουελ.

ΔΙΑΙΤΗΤΗΣ: Γιόνας Έρικσον (Σουηδία)

ΚΟΚΚΙΝΗ: 90΄+ Σάμουελ (2η κίτρινη)

ΚΙΤΡΙΝΕΣ: Μαρκάνο – Γκασί, Γκονζάλες, Σάμουελ, Σάφαρι

ΠΟΡΤΟ (Χούλιεν Λοπετέγκι): Φαμπιάνο, Ντανίλο (22΄ Μάρτινς), Μαϊκόν, Μαρκάνο, Άλεξ Σάντρο, Κασεμίρο, Μπραχίμι (74΄ Ρούμπεν Νέβες), Εβάντρο (79΄ Κουαρέσμα), Ερέρα, Τέγιο, Αμπουμπακάρ

ΒΑΣΙΛΕΙΑ (Πάουλο Σόουσα): Βάτσλικ, Σάμουελ, Σαρ (57΄ Εμπολό), Σάφαρι, Τζούφι, Φ. Φράι (63΄ Κακιτάνι), Ελνενί, Τσάκα, Στρέλερ, Γκασί (77΄ Καλά), Γκονζάλες

Τετάρτη 11 Μαρτίου

Τσέλσι (Αγγλία)-Παρί Σεν Ζερμέν (Γαλλία) (1-1)

Μπάγερν Μονάχου (Γερμανία)-Σαχτάρ Ντόνετσκ (Ουκρανία) (0-0)
Μάντσεστερ Σίτι (Αγγλία)-Μπαρτσελόνα (Ισπανία) 1-2 (18/3)

Γιουβέντους (Ιταλία)-Ντόρτμουντ (Γερμανία) 2-1 (18/3)

Λεβερκούζεν (Γερμανία)-Ατλέτικο Μαδρίτης (Ισπανία) 1-0 (17/3)

Άρσεναλ (Αγγλία)-Μονακό (Γαλλία) 1-3 (17/3)

Πηγή:in.gr

Σκληρή γλώσσα από τον Β.Σόιμπλε κατά του Γ.Βαρουφάκη

Σκληρή γλώσσα από τον Β.Σόιμπλε κατά του Γ.Βαρουφάκη

O υπουργός Οικονομικών της Γερμανίας Βόλφγκανγκ Σόιμπλε

 

Για να εκταμιευθεί οποιαδήποτε δόση προς την Ελλάδα θα πρέπει πρώτα να έχει εκπληρώσει τους όρους του προγράμματος επανέλαβε για άλλη μια φορά σήμερα, Τρίτη, ο υπουργός Οικονομικών της Γερμανίας Βόλφγκανγκ Σόιμπλε σε συνέντευξη Τύπου που παραχώρησε μετά την ολοκλήρωση του συμβουλίου Ecofin.

Ο υπουργός Οικονομικών της Γερμανίας κληθείς να σχολιάσει την αναφορά του Έλληνα υπουργού Οικονομικών Γιάνη Βαρουφάκη ότι μετά τη συμφωνία της 20ης Φεβρουαρίου δεν χάθηκε χρόνος απάντησε σκληρά: «Ο Βαρουφάκης είναι ο μόνος από το Eurogroup που είπε ότι δεν υπήρξε σπατάλη χρόνου. Η Ελλάδα έχει ήδη συμφωνήσει από τις 20 Φεβρουαρίου ότι θα εκπληρώσει όλες τις υποχρεώσεις της προς τους πιστωτές».

Για το ECOFIN είπε πως «είχαμε μόνο μια μικρή συζήτηση για την Ελλάδα, όλοι συμφωνήσαμε ότι τίποτε δεν επετεύχθη».

Συνεχίζοντας σε επικριτικό ύφος για τον έλληνα υπουργό ο κ. Σόιμπλε ανέφερε: «Ο Βαρουφάκης έχει διαφορετική μορφή επικοινωνίας. Αποκόμισα “λανθασμένη εντύπωση”, τού είπα, ότι αυτή η μορφή επικοινωνίας ήταν “νέα” για μένα».

Ο Σόιμπλε απαντώντας σε ερωτήσεις για την Ελλάδα είπε πως η ελληνική κυβέρνηση θα πρέπει πρώτα να έλθει σε συμφωνία με τους θεσμούς σε σχέση με την επίτευξη των όρων του προγράμματος και μετά θα λάβει χρηματοδοτική στήριξη. «Τίποτε δεν θα συμβεί πριν από αυτό», είπε.

Ο Γερμανός υπουργός προειδοποίησε ότι «δεν θα δοθεί άλλη βοήθεια στην Ελλάδα έως ότου οι διεθνείς πιστωτές της χώρας συμφωνήσουν ότι έχει εφαρμόσει τις δεσμεύσεις της για την προώθηση μεταρρυθμίσεων».

«Η Ελλάδα πρέπει να συνομιλήσει με τους θεσμούς για να εγγυηθεί ότι το Μνημόνιο Κατανόησης εκπληρώνεται» ανέφερε χαρακτηριστικά ο κ. Σόιμπλε σε δημοσιογράφους. «Μόνον όταν εκπληρωθεί αυτός ο όρος υπάρχει μια πιθανότητα να υπάρξει μια εκταμίευση από το πρόγραμμα» πρόσθεσε.

«Πολλά κράτη μέλη πιστεύουν ότι οι μικρότερες χώρες αντιμετωπίζονται διαφορετικά από ότι μεγαλύτερες. Θα κρατήσω τον εαυτό μου έξω από αυτή τη συζήτηση», είπε.

Ο ίδιος προσέθεσε πως «η Δημοκρατία από μόνη της δεν λειτουργεί» και πως «χρειάζονται ορισμένα όρια».

Η αντίδραση του Νίκου Παππά

Σε υψηλούς τόνους ήταν η απάντηση του υπουργού επικρατείας, Νίκου Παππά, ο οποίος υποστήριξε ότι ο Γερμανός υπουργός είναι ο βασικός υποστηρικτής των αποτυχημένων πολιτικών σε Ελλάδα και Ευρώπη και είναι σαφές ότι η αποτυχία του σχεδίου ασφυξίας της Ελλάδας, έχει φέρει κάποιους σε δύσκολη θέση.

«Οι σημερινές του δηλώσεις είναι επίσης σαφές ότι απευθύνονται στο εσωτερικό και εσωκομματικό του ακροατήριο», συνεχίζει ο κ. Παππάς αναφέροντας ότι αυτές οι δηλώσεις είναι «ασύμβατες τόσο με τη θεσμική θέση που κατέχει ο κ. Σόιμπλε όσο και με την προσδοκία που έχει διαμορφωθεί στην Ευρώπη για εξεύρεση μιας νέας λύσης».

«Η εμμονή και η επιμονή του σε αυτή την πολιτική και σε αυτό το ύφος είναι ασύμβατες με την πορεία προς μία ενωμένη και δημοκρατική Ευρώπη» καταλήγει ο κ. Παππάς.

Πηγή: in.gr

Greece:Emotional apathy sinking in

In the past five years, despite consecutive “bailout programs,” or maybe because of them, the terms “last chance,” “Grexit,” “ultimatum” and “destruction” have been doing the rounds with exhausting regularity in Greek and international headlines.

To begin with, they are exhausting our souls. They are also exhausting the country’s economy, which could not have withstood such a barrage of negativity even if it had been among the strongest in Europe. And that it is not has been acknowledged even by the most fervent champions of the famous “success story” which left Greece unable to meet its current obligations.

Whether these proclamations of doom are based on reality are blown out of proportion or invented is neither here not there because their effect remains the same – corrosive. And, unfortunately or fortunately, we cannot all deal with the fear being cultivated in the same way as Former Finance Minister Gikas Hardouvelis, who admitted to spiriting money out of Greece because he was scared. The overwhelming majority of Greeks cannot even dream of the kind of income he made.

The result is that gradually, from one scare to another, many – and especially those who have nothing left to lose – have given up looking for defenses, whether individual or collective, and have given in to the sin of sloth. They are not lazy or indifferent but experiencing emotional apathy. It has become a certainty that our destruction is much worse than a self-fulfilling prophecy: It has been orchestrated from outside. Either to punish the “lazy Greeks” or to warn others being tempted into believing that the European Union – as it is today, as a herald of a policy of austerity that can’t even be backed by the numbers – is repulsive rather than attractive.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker himself believes this to be true. His statements over the weekend in a German newspaper are probably the only comfort we can find in the deluge of negative news and commentaries about Greece, the majority of which are either patronizing and insulting or imperious and coercive. While Juncker naturally blamed Greek politicians for the country’s predicament, he ruled out the possibility of a eurozone exit and also added his concern that “not everyone in the European Union has understood how serious the situation in Greece is.” He was talking about the poverty and the unemployment, and the risks of the social fabric being destroyed if sloth spreads. Do the Europeans refuse to understand or just not care? It is a rhetorical question, especially when we consider how many times we have heard the European establishment that decides the country’s fate express its respect for the Greek people’s sacrifices.

source:ekatimerini.com

PM Tsipras says will pursue German war reparations

Launching debate on new committee, Tsipras speaks of unfulfilled obligations.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras Tuesday expressed his government’s firm intention to seek war reparations from Germany, noting that Athens would show sensitivity that it hoped to see reciprocated from Berlin.

In a speech in Parliament, launching a debate on the creation of a committee to seek war reparations, the repayment of a forced loan and the return of antiquities, Tsipras told MPs that the matter of war reparations was “very technical and sensitive” but one he has a duty to pursue.

He also seemed to indirectly connect the matter to talks between Greece and its international creditors on the country’s loan program. “The Greek government will strive to honor its commitments to the full,” he said. “But it will also strive to ensure all unfulfilled obligations toward Greece and the Greek people are fulfilled,” he added. “You cannot pick and choose on ethical issues.”

Tsipras noted that Germany got support “despite the crimes of the Third Reich” chiefly thanks to the London Debt Agreement of 1953. Since reunification, German governments have used “silence, legal tricks and delays” to avoid solving the problem, he said. “We are not giving morality lessons but we will not accept morality lessons either,” Tsipras said.

In comments to Parliament later PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos said it was important not to link the issue of reparations with Greece’s talks with creditors.

source:ekathimerini.com

Technical talks start in Brussels amid confusion about Athens visit

Representatives of the government and the country’s international creditors are to start “technical level” talks in Brussels on Wednesday following an agreement thrashed out in Brussels on Monday by eurozone finance ministers, though it remained unclear when, or if, foreign auditors would visit Athens for talks.

Although the government has stressed that the so-called troika of inspectors is a thing of the past, Greece’s creditors are to be represented in Brussels by the same officials of the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund that had visited Athens under the previous conservative administration. Greece will be represented in the talks by Nikos Theoharakis, the Finance Ministry’s general secretary for fiscal policy, and Giorgos Houliarakis, the head of Greece’s technical team, among others.

Officials from the two sides are to examine a set of proposals submitted by Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, including measures aimed at boosting revenue such as a controversial plan to enlist students and tourists as tax spies.

But creditors are keen to get auditors on the ground in Athens as soon as possible, not least because they have not had access to official data for nine months and are unclear about the state of Greece’s finances.

Government sources on Tuesday were quick to deny reports that representatives of the EC, ECB and IMF were to visit the General Accounting Office on Wednesday. The terse denial came after Varoufakis’s insistence after Monday’s Eurogroup that officials of the “institutions” could visit Athens separately and would be given access to data but that the three should not come together. Government sources echoed that stance on Tuesday, saying officials could visit individually for clarifications or detailed information.

The understanding in Brussels, however, seems to be that officials will come to Athens in the coming days. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble insisted on Tuesday that talks would involve the “troika” that Athens has rejected. “His ideas have to be corrected,” Schaeuble said when asked about Varoufakis’s insistence on Athens dealing with creditors individually.

source: ekathimerini.com