Monthly Archives: April 2015

Australian tourist will sue Greek government

Australian tourist will sue Greek government

Grant Uranie is suing the Greek government after he was injured in a terrorist shoot-out in Athens last year.

Lawyers have sent a letter to the Greek government for ‘open information’ about the incident and compensation.

An Australian tourist will sue the Greek government after being shot in a terrorist shoot-out. The story was first revealed by Neos Kosmos.

A recent report in The Age says Grant Uranie is having ongoing rehabilitation to strengthen his ankle and experiences pain and an occasional limp. The marketing and commerce student at Swinburne University is so far $25,000 out of pocket for medical bills, loss of income from part-time jobs and other costs.

His football career as a contracted player for Scoresby in the Eastern Football League is in doubt due to the injury and it was a second income for him.
Defteros Lawyers have sent a letter to the Greek government for ‘open information’ about the incident and compensation for Mr Uranie but there has been no response. The law firm has briefed senior counsel to make a final petition to the Greek government and then commence proceedings in the Greek court system.

His travel insurance reimbursed the cost of his cancelled Contiki tour and covered the cost of changing his flight. He was not reimbursed for the loss of income from his part-time jobs at Coles and Supercheap Auto while he was recovering.

Exclusions in his insurance policy don’t cover ‘a loss that arises directly or indirectly from an act or threat of terrorism’.

During the ordeal, he was grateful for the help he received from the Australian embassy in Athens. After arriving home, Mr Uranie was treated at Casey Hospital, where an ultrasound discovered damage to his Achilles tendon. He then underwent an operation at Dandenong Hospital.

Approaching the 12-month anniversary of the holiday gone wrong, Mr Uranie still feels on edge. “If I’m in a public area and there’s police around, I do kind of get, I wouldn’t say flashbacks, but a little bit of nervousness and anxiety.”

source:Neos Kosmos

Australia faces a Greek future?

Australia faces a Greek future?

Prime Minister Tony Abbott during question time. Photo: AAP/Lukas Coch.

ALP accuses government of inflammatory and irresponsible comments.

Labor has condemned Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s claim that Australia was heading for a “Greek-style economic future” as inflammatory, irresponsible and capable of harming economic confidence.

The prime minister should be far more responsible than this constant scaremongering which is having a clear impact on confidence in the community.

Mr Abbott pledged he would not fix the federal budget this year at the expense of households but predicted a “broad budget balance” within five years.

Prime Minister Abbott says his government’s second budget will be “dull” in terms of spending cuts.

“Under the former Labor government we were heading to a Greek-style economic future,” the prime minister said.
In 2012, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) showed Greece’s debt was 164 per cent of GDP, while Australia’s was 42 per cent.

OECD data also showed that, in 2014, Greece’s unemployment hit 26 per cent of the labour force compared with 6 per cent in Australia.

Alan Tudge, parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, says this is the constant argument from those who dismiss Australia’s debt as a problem: debt levels in places such as Greece are well over 100 per cent of gross domestic product while in Australia they are 15 per cent.

He says Greece may have higher debt levels than Australia but it didn’t start that way. Rather, it started with low debt but found it impossible to stop its growth (despite repeated warnings) until it was too late. This is the real context for our debate.

He says when Greece started to receive warnings about its debt levels back in the ’80s, it didn’t act. By the ’90s it started to cut back on some spending but couldn’t do enough. By the 2000s, it was too late. Australia is not Greece – the Greece of today or even the Greece of 1980.

“Nevertheless, the lesson is clear: once a country is on a debt pathway it is difficult to turn it around. And what can start as a smaller debt can quickly become a seismic one,” Mr Tudge said.

source: Neos Kosmos

Η μικρούλα από τη Συρία που «παραδόθηκε»: Η ιστορία της φωτογραφίας

Η μικρούλα από τη Συρία που «παραδόθηκε»: Η ιστορία της φωτογραφίας

Σηκώνει ενωμένα τα χέρια πάνω από το κεφάλι, δαγκώνει τα χείλη, το βλέμμα της προδίδει ένα κλάμα χωρίς δάκρυα. Είναι τρομοκρατημένη. Η τετράχρονη Χουντά παραδίνεται μπροστά στην κάμερα του φωτογράφου νομίζοντας ότι είναι όπλο… Η φωτογραφία-αποτύπωση του εμφυλίου της Συρίας μέσα από την παράδοση ενός παιδιού έχει κατακλύσει το Διαδίκτυο.

Το στιγμιότυπο έγινε viral· μοιράστηκε δεκάδες χιλιάδες φορές στα κοινωνικά δίκτυα αφότου αναρτήθηκε στο Twitter την περασμένη Τρίτη από την φωτορεπόρτερ Νάντια Αμπού Σαμπάν, η οποία βρίσκεται στη Λωρίδα της Γάζας.

Δίπλα στο hashtag #Surrended η Νάντια έγραψε ότι φωτορεπόρτερ τράβηξε αυτή τη λήψη του τετράχρονου παιδιού από τη Συρία, που νόμιζε ότι η κάμερά του ήταν όπλο και έτσι εκείνη παραδόθηκε.

Μόνο η συγκεκριμένη ανάρτηση αναδημοσιεύτηκε στο Twitter 11.000 φορές.

Όσο η εικόνα «εξαπλωνόταν» στο Διαδίκτυο γεννήθηκαν αμφιβολίες για τη γνησιότητά της, υπήρξαν κατηγορίες ότι είναι στημένη, σύγχυση ως προς το εάν το παιδί είναι αγόρι ή κορίτσι, αναφορές ότι είχε τραβηχτεί το 2012, ενώ ορισμένα δημοσιεύματα απέδωσαν στην ίδια την Νάντια Αμπού Σαμπάν τη λήψη της φωτογραφίας.

Την μικρή που συγκινεί και αγγίζει συνειδήσεις έχει απαθανατίσει ο Τούρκος φωτορεπόρτερ Οσμάν Σαγιρλί. Ήταν Δεκέμβριος του 2014 στον προσφυγικό καταυλισμό Ατμέ στη Συρία, περίπου δέκα χιλιόμετρα από τα τουρκικά σύνορα, όπου είχε ταξιδέψει η τετράχρονη μαζί με την μητέρα και τα δύο αδέλφια της.

Ο καταυλισμός βρίσκεται περίπου 150 χιλιόμετρα από το σπίτι τους στην Χάμα της κεντρικής Συρίας.

«Χρησιμοποιούσα τηλεσκοπικό φακό, και εκείνη νόμιζε πως ήταν όπλο» διηγείται ο Σαγιρλί με τον οποίο επικοινώνησε το BBC.

«Συνειδητοποίησα ότι ήταν τρομοκρατημένη αφότου τράβηξα και κοίταξα την φωτογραφία, γιατί δάγκωσε τα χείλη και σήκωσε τα χέρια της. Συνήθως τα παιδιά τρέχουν μακριά, κρύβουν το πρόσωπό τους ή χαμογελούν όταν δουν κάμερα» ανέφερε.

Η φωτογραφία δημοσιεύτηκε για πρώτη φορά στην εφημερίδα Turkiye, όπου εργαζόταν επί 25 χρόνια ο Οσμάν Σαγιρλί καλύπτοντας πολέμους και φυσικές καταστροφές στο εξωτερικό -σήμερα ο φωτορεπόρτερ βρίσκεται στην Τανζανία.

Ο ίδιος δηλώνει ότι οι φωτογραφίες των παιδιών στους προσφυγικούς καταυλισμούς δίνουν την πιο δυνατή εικόνα των δεινών που έχει υποφέρει ο συριακός λαός: «Υπάρχουν εκτοπισμένοι στους καταυλισμούς. Έχει μεγαλύτερο νόημα να δεις τι έχουν υποφέρει όχι μέσα από τους ενήλικες, αλλά μέσα από τα παιδιά. Είναι τα παιδιά που καθρεφτίζουν τα συναισθήματα με την αθωότητά τους»…

Πηγή:in.gr

Greek business sentiment in decline

Business sentiment and consumer confidence were in decline in March, according to a monthly survey conducted by the Foundation for Economic and Industrial Research (IOBE) and published on Tuesday.

The economic sentiment index in Greece slid from 98.2 points in February to 96.8 points in March as pessimism regarding the course of the economy was relatively increased across virtually all sectors, especially services and construction.

According to IOBE the return of downbeat estimates is due to the tight credit conditions and the extended uncertainty over the general course of Greece’s economy. Several issues remain open, IOBE added, as no agreement has yet been reached between Athens and its creditors nor are citizens and enterprises able to evaluate the content of the prospective deal.

The foundation also estimates that the Greek economy is in a state of anticipation ahead of the new conditions that will define its framework, at least in the short term. The expectations of both people and businesses will then be shaped accordingly.

source:ekathimerini.com

Cyprus soccer eyes reunion after 60-year divorce

In this file photo, barbed wire on a wall near the soccer pitch inside the United Nations controlled buffer zone separating ethnically-split Cyprus in the capital Nicosia.

 Turkish Cypriot soccer officials on Monday vowed to press ahead with attempts to reunite with the Cyprus Football Association, (CFA), triggering a political storm on the ethnically-split island.

In a controversy running to the heart of the highly-charged division of Cyprus, the Cyprus Turkish Football Association (CTFA) told soccer governing body FIFA on Monday they had launched a process to eventually become a member of the Greek Cypriot CFA.

A senior Turkish Cypriot official blasted the move “suicide” for the future of soccer in the isolated Turkish Cypriot breakaway state and urged the association to reconsider.

But CTFA president Hasan Sertoglu told a news conference on the Turkish side of Nicosia, Cyprus’s partitioned capital, they were forging ahead with their reforms.

“Today an era in Turkish Cypriot football is closing, and we are doing what we believe is right,” he said.

Turkish Cypriot sports minister Serdar Denktash was quoted in local media on Monday as describing the move “outrageous.” He threatened to cut funding to soccer clubs if they went ahead, media reported.

But Sertoglu responded: “This is not a one-man show. I have the full support of the (CTFA) executive committee.”

“This is not a political issue, we are doing this for the future of our youth,” he said, referring to the present isolation of Turkish Cypriot soccer.

Ethnic Greeks and Turks have lived separately for decades with the football authorities splitting in 1954 and Turkey invading the island 20 years later.

The Turkish Cypriot breakaway state is recognized only by Ankara, while a Greek Cypriot government effectively runs only the south and is internationally recognized as the sole legal authority on the island.

Without any formal affiliation to FIFA, the CTFA cannot compete in international competitions, reflecting the political isolation of the breakaway state.

The CTFA’s decision to change its statutes, and put them for ratification to its members “as soon as possible” comes 17 months after an initial agreement was signed in Zurich in November 2013 with CFA chairman Costakis Koutsokoumnis in the presence of FIFA president Sepp Blatter and UEFA president Michel Platini.

Under the terms of the Zurich agreement, the CTFA is to apply to be a member of the CFA, which will now mean Turkish clubs and players coming under the jurisdiction of the CFA which would then recognize the CTFA as one of its associate members.

“This is another clear confirmation of the CTFA decision, to regain our place, with all rights and obligations in the

CFA,” Sertoglu said in a letter to FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke on Monday