Category: Greece

  • Erdogan Will Return Greek Properties!

    Erdogan Will Return Greek Properties!

    According to the Turkish newspaper “Sabah”, the government of Erdogan decided to vote a new presidential decree, in order to return all the real estates of minorities’ institutions which were declared in 1936. This means that many Greeks will take back their properties and can demand compensation. This is also a great victory for the Ecumenical Patriarch.

    In 1936, the Turkish government had asked of the parishes and minorities’ institutions to possess declared real estates. However, decades later they took back the real estates which had not been declared or were acquired as inheritance, a donation, or after purchase.

    The Turkish Prime Minister will make the announcement on Sunday night during a dinner where the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew along with 162 representatives of minorities’ institutions will attend.

    , 28 August 2011

  • Thessaloniki Mayor Boutaris Meets with Manager of Turkish Airlines

    Thessaloniki Mayor Boutaris Meets with Manager of Turkish Airlines

    Manager of Turkish Airlines, Utku Yazan, had a meeting with the Mayor of Thessaloniki, Mr. Boutaris, in the City Hall. His purpose was to thank the mayor of Thessaloniki for his support during the first three months of the operation of the direct airline Thessaloniki – Konstantinoupolis.

    The two men discussed issues of THY flights from Thessaloniki to Istanbul, but also matters of general interest concerning the economic and social situation in Thessaloniki.

    The Turkish Airlines have a special interest for the city of Thessaloniki, considering that it will contribute greatly to the overall service of Greek passengers to and from Turkey.

    via Thessaloniki Mayor Boutaris Meets with Manager of Turkish Airlines | Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.

  • Poland on its Way to Greece

    Poland on its Way to Greece

    polish flagA stimulated GDP

    The Polish GDP is strongly influenced by a stream of financial transfers from the European
    Union, in 2010 the net income from the EU budget was about 8 billion euro.
    Were it not for the transfers from the Union, the change of the Polish GDP in relation to
    2009 would have been lower by at least 6 percentage points and we would be facing the
    drop of the GDP. The Polish annual GDP is about 350 billion euro and thus the amount of
    net income of 8 billion euro from the Union’s budget is directly equivalent to 2.3 % of the
    GDP. However, in a short-term life cycle assessment, it can be estimated that expenses
    resulting from a subsidy that Poland receives have a multiplier effect of 3-4 times.
    Companies and employees completing projects financed by the Union spend monies
    earned on other goods and services so that other producers also purchase others goods etc.
    Already in a short period concerns the projects implementation it is possible to consider
    that the amount of 8 billion euro of annual income from the Union increases the Polish
    GDP by at least 20 billion euro or by about 6 percentage points.
      

    A High Budget Deficit
     

    The Polish government explains to its citizens that the high deficit of public finances stems
    from financial transfers from the Union and is a result of a need to provide own
    contribution when implementing projects co-financed with assistance programs.
    This justification is good for the public and within the framework of a political campaign,
    however is it not well grounded in facts. If we assume that investment financed by Union
    money are spent in a purposeful and justified manner, one also needs to assume that
    without these subsidies the Polish government would also complete some of these projects
    on its own: for example repairs of roads, bridges, highway construction, sewage treatment
    plants, water processing intakes, sewage systems, water laterals etc. Other projects such as
    renovations of historic buildings, construction of urban fountains or piers would be most
    probably cancelled or postponed.
     
    Some of the projects built with assistance do not require co-financing at all, in particular
    projects regarding social security, however, investments require about 25% of own
    contribution. And so, if the Union co-financing of an investment amounts to 6 billion euro
    a year, then Poland’s own contribution is 2 billion euro, which results in 8 billion euro of
    the value of the investment. And thus, were it not for the assistance from the Union which
    results in the investment of the value of 8 billion euro, the Polish government, self-
    governing entities and companies would reduce the scale of projects being implemented
    with the assumption that out of the projects currently co-financed by the Union, some of
    these projects would be executed, for example, by spending 3-4 billion euro on some of the
    most essential investments.
     
    In conclusion, were it not for the assistance from the Union the scale of the budget deficit
    would have been much larger.

    1

    The Aborted Reform of Public Finances
     
    The transfers from the Union made it possible for the Polish government to minimize
    effects of the crisis of 2008-2010. They also caused a complete lack of any public finance
    reforms in Poland. The increase in the Polish debt in the last 3 years from 529 billion
    Polish zloty in the end of 2007 to 778 billion zloty (195 billion euro) in the end of 2010 is
    a reflection of policy crash of the Polish government.
     
    The Polish deficit was one of the highest in Europe in 2010, it was higher than in Iceland
    and just a bit lower than the deficit of Greece. Apart from it, Poland is one of the EU
    member states with the highest budget deficits (higher than 6 percent in 2010), which
    increased their deficit between 2009 and 2010. While in 2010 Greece decreased its deficit
    from more than 15 percent in 2009 to about 8 percent of GDP, Poland increased its deficit
    from 7.1 percent to almost 8 percent of GDP (forecasts of the ministry of finance predicted
    a drop of deficit to 6.9 percent of GDP.)
     
    The obligations of the Polish budget practically do not capture the reserve pertaining to
    demographic changes for earned benefits for future retirees. The reserve created for this
    purpose is a fraction of the state’s obligations of the benefits owed to the future retirees. If
    a reserve resulting from demographic changes were considered in its real amount, it would
    transcend the relation of 60 percent of public debt to GDP by tens of percentage points.
     
    The Catastrophic State of the Social Security
     
    Poland is one of the European countries that spend the least on the social security of its
    citizens. For example only 4.4 percent of the GDP is destined for health care while the
    Union’s average is 7.5 of the GDP, additionally the average GDP per capita in the Union is
    much higher than in Poland. As a result, the health care is in a structural crisis, patients
    wait for months for a visit with a specialist, it is similar with planned surgeries and
    procedures, and the access to new methods of treatment is also limited by the budget of the
    health care fund. Because of this, many people die while waiting for their medical services.
    This situation affects not just the elderly but also people of productive age, people with a
    suspicion of a neoplasm wait for months for a visit and to start their therapy. In the Polish
    press and TV media there are ongoing appeals for help in financing treatments, also in case
    of children who, by law, are entitled to free health care.
     
    Medical prevention policy, including the most serious of conditions is conducted in a
    minimal way, due to policy of saving on medical costs. In this situation the speech of the
    Polish minister of finance that he is striving to limit the budget deficit to zero in 2015 (for
    obvious reasons the forecast must be fairly distant – longer than the minister’s term) is not
    only not serious but it is also deceiving.
     
    The situation of lack of access to medical care leads to increasing social tensions and may
    lead to the eruption of public dissatisfaction. The state of expenses on health care is
    a litmus test of the Polish budget’s situation. Any government would try to secure the right
    to healthcare for its citizens if in this case the situation is so dramatic and what kind of
    comment can be made about other matters financed from the budget?

    2

    Union Money Spoils the Country
     
    Much of the resources transferred within the framework of assistance programs are wasted
    in Poland. A country of a high level of corruption is unfortunately quite different than
    France, Germany or Denmark. As an example, money for the training of the unemployed
    directed to employment offices seem like a very sensible idea. However, how is this
    program executed in Poland? More than one local official, upon seeing the pools of money
    that will pass through his/her office is motivated to contact an owner of a training
    company or call on a company of a friend which will be training the unemployed from the
    Union means. The tender for the service for the office has high chances of being fixed by
    the arbitrators who evaluate it. The higher the level and with larger projects, one can
    expect corruption.
     
    The Polish people have a different experience with the functioning of the state from the
    majority of developed European democracies. More than 100 years of partitions and the
    recent 50 years of dependency on the Soviet Union does not serve well the level of trust of
    the citizens towards the state. A public opinion poll conducted a few years ago indicated
    that more than 90 percent of the Poles consider tax fraud as something normal and not
    deserving condemnation. It is surely a different way of relating to the state than what is
    found in case of citizens of Denmark, Germany or Sweden. Therefore, many programs
    executed successfully in the countries of the earlier Union will not necessarily work in Poland.
    Another example of the waste of Union money in Poland is the financing of controversial
    projects. For example, in Plock city, of which I am a resident, the construction of a pier
    with a restaurant – pictures link – was funded from Union monies. The media make fun of
    this investment that it is probably the only pier in Europe built along a river with the
    restaurant from public monies. The Poles know very well that the Union is not too stupid
    and before it opens its eyes, one should take as much of what is given…
    This manna from heaven caused a situation in which officials at all levels are busy going
    through as much of the Union funding as possible, nevertheless the real problems remain
    unsolved.
     
    When it is all accounted for it may turn out that it was not only the Union who lost money
    on the assistance programs but also Poland may turn out to be a losing party, where the
    distribution of Union funding only increased the scale of corruption and first of all the
    reform of public finance has been neglected.
     
    Margin Analysis in Economy
     
    The Union’s expenditures for Poland in the amount of 2.3 percent of the Polish GDP
    influence the growth of the GDP by at least 6 percentage points. It is one of the symptoms
    of the multiplier effect of one event on another. However, the influence of the economic
    stimulus may be more diversified.
     
    Let’s return to the example of the pier on the bank of the Vistula River, the construction of
    it caused the increase of the GDP to a degree higher than expenses for this purpose (life
    cycle analysis). However, if it turns out in the future that the construction requires more

    3

    investment i.e. maintenance or demolition after a wave of an ice float that destroys
    the pier, more expenses will appear, this time probably without any grants from the Union
    but if there are expenses, then there is an increase in the GDP. The added value of this
    episode with the construction and the demolition from the point of view of an observer is
    zero or negative, but from the point of view of GDP in both cases, the increases of GDP will
    have been demonstrated. Thus from the point of view of GDP, not the purpose of the
    expenditures is what makes sense but just any business activity makes sense. However, if
    this entity is useful or profitable, its value is visible in a long-term development. Projects
    may be more or less reasonable but the record of expenses carried has just one appearance
    – they remain in the form of a public debt. It is good then, when the benefits of the project
    (including the satisfaction of social needs) is higher than the expenses, including debt costs.
    Therefore if the increase of assistance from the Union had a multiplier effect on the growth
    of the GDP in Poland, there is probably also a reverse dependency. The fact that one is a
    net payer by Germany or France limits their GDP much more significantly than it appears
    from the amounts transferred. In case of Germany who pays the most into the Union
    budget, the net spending of 12 billion euro annually means that, already with the view of the
    perspective of next year, this expense lessens the GDP of Germany by about 40 billion euro.
    Since it is the life cycle of analysis, then the lack of means translates in a multiplier effect
    into subsequent years, etc. The final effect means that the long-term contribution of
    Germany may turn out to be an excessive burden that is visible only in 10-15 years.
    The amounts that the Germans are giving away to the Union budget now plus the
    multiplier effect in long-term may bring about the fact that the Germans will pay for the
    Union several hundred billion euro (near one trillion) expressed in current euro – this is
    the power of the multiplier effect in a long period of time.
     
    Also, the assistance for Greece, in which Germany participated the most, may be felt by the
    German retirees in several years’ time. From the German point of view the Euro zone with
    different specifics and mentality such as Greece or southern Italy (though Italy is still one
    country, of course) was a big strategic mistake. What is good for the Union bureaucrats and
    looks good in officials’ plans will not necessarily serve wealthy societies well, especially
    those ones who have a high level of savings, and the idea of a currency union in a place
    with a very different model for life such as Greece may turn out to be a hellish idea.
    The Germans are probably starting to understand that they have been set up and that they
    should watch the value of their currency and besides the reality of a world economic crisis
    which includes their country just the same as any other, they have to struggle with
    problems which are not theirs. The wealth of Germany may evaporate very quickly in this
    way because they are in a very different situation than the United States. From a point of
    view that emphasizes the well being of Germany, their anti-crisis policy should be opposite
    to the one conducted by Ben Bernanke – more on this subject under

    Between Monetary Policies. Where are markets heading to?

    4

     

    The Polish Government Sweeps under the Carpet
     
    In order to evaluate what awaits Poland, a few facts should be compared. Poland can speak
    about the increase in its GDP in recent years only thanks to the transfer of funds from the
    Union. Were it not for the payments from the Union, Poland would have had a chronic
    drop in the GDP, thus reflecting the way Poland has been governed in the last years.
    Despite the transfers from the Union Poland has one of the highest budget deficits, and an
    increase of public debt from 530 billion to 780 billion PLN in three years should turn on
    alarm lights that something very bad is going on. It is obvious that budget expenditures
    influence the GDP, however it is a short-term dependency, in the long term the results are
    just the opposite, the means that have been spent by the state would have been much better
    allocated by the market, although they would not translate so fast in the demand effect.
    For the ineffective increase in the GDP in the last three years, Poland will pay with the debt
    that increased by 250 billion PLN. Despite such significant budget expenses financed by
    deficit and transfers from the Union, the satisfying of social needs such as health care is at
    a dramatically low level. In addition, the budget does not cover the necessary reserve for
    future retirement benefits and which results from the changing demographic structure.
    Moreover, the finance minister announces that this year he intends to use some funds from
    this reserve and workers’ organizations and also employers’ unanimously call this step
    an absurd and clear theft from future retirees.
     
    Know things not by words, but by deeds. It is the budget deficit that reflects the condition
    of finances of a state, especially when other countries decrease theirs and Poland increases
    her own deficit. A deficit and its dynamics are a better indicators of therapy used than
    a level of public debt. Clearly, no country in the world will be able to change the latter from
    day to day. Unfortunately in Poland the funds are disappearing and despite the high
    budget deficit and transfers from the Union in recent years, faulty budget items, there is no
    money to satisfy the elementary social needs.
     
    It is not the way it is but the way the people think it is
     
    The Polish government keeps to one principle, what counts are only public relations, both
    the kind directed at its own citizens and the kind directed towards the financial markets.
    The government realized that one of the highest budget deficits in Europe will not be
    tolerated for long. In an anticipated response the government announces the forecasts for
    deficit reduction and even forecasts a balanced budget for the year 2015. However, the
    attempts to limit the deficit in 2011 have already caused a decline in the GDP growth,
    however, the macroeconomic results will be felt more fully at the end of 2011 and in 2012.
    In order for the government to show the growth of the GDP, the Polish economy needs
    permanent transfers, both the external ones originating with the Union, and those
    resulting from the growth of the public debt. In short term the growth of the GDP achieved
    by means of a steroid IV-drip could be presented as a success. But everything has its end,
    the markets started to loudly demand a reduction of budget deficit. The government had
    no choice and must meet the market expectations, it would like to contain the most in the
    long-term declarations and forecasts…

    5

    In Polish reality the high budget deficit was a type of a treatment of symptoms, which
    masked the real condition of the patient. The reduction of deficit, although it is necessary,
    is not a sufficient solution. The Polish economy requires structural changes which have
    been aborted and which will be mentioned in the conclusion.
     
    The attempt to fight the deficit showed that the blanket is getting shorter and shorter, the
    rate of shortening of the blanket must be troubling to the government, it is clear that the
    Polish economy is not able to meet the markets’ demands on one hand, and the roused
    hopes of the Poles which the government constantly increased in the name of a permanent
    election campaign, on the other. Both realities have to collide with each other. All of the
    energy of the government is directed towards survival until the elections. In Poland the
    parliament, but even self-governing entities are a partisan booty and the time horizon
    reaches the elections period.
     
    Unfortunately, the western, more developed democracies did not foresee some things, their
    assistance programs very often serve to support social pathologies, ineffective budgets and
    they lead to the bankruptcy of economies that they assist.
     
    Polish public debt revaluation
     
    Poland’s public debt, but also the citizens’ has been growing like an avalanche in the most
    recent period. Poles’ debt increased to 500 billion zloty, but the most important is the
    dynamics of the increase of the debt. Due to mortgage credits the private debt of the Poles
    grew from 34.5 billion PLN in March 2005 to the amount of 286 billion PLN in May 2011,
    so within 6 years, the mortgage debt of the Poles grew by 728%. It is the dynamics of debt
    increase translates into the dynamics of disposalble income of households.
     
    For many years Poland will feel a great increase of obligations due to the increase of
    mortgage debt of its citizens. Every crisis and even a period of poorer market lookout will
    remind the Poles of the credit boom of the past 6 years. Even in the United States or Spain
    there has not been a similar percentage of increase of debt of the citizens resulting from
    mortgage credits.
     
    The situation is even more dramatic in Poland because more than half of the value of
    mortgage credits is denominated in Swiss franc. The borrowers, apart from the purchase of
    the house, they have taken speculative positions in foreign exchange market. However,
    mortgage credit for a house or an apartment is not the best instrument to invest in the
    Forex market. The incompetent supervision of finances in Poland is to be mostly blamed
    for this pathology. As to why this happened can be answered indirectly, because it was
    easier for banks to sell more credits in this way and the regulations were such as to be
    advantageous to the lenders. Therefore we were dealing with either lack of common sense
    or with corruption of the employees of financial supervisory sector.
     
    To a large extent, a responsibility for the huge growth of mortgage debt among Poles is to
    be placed with the government who stimulated these decisions of its citizens with the
    demonstrated economic growth, which was stimulated in turn by the growth of debt and
    also by the transfers of Union money.

  • Soros suggests Greece, Portugal quit euro-zone

    Soros suggests Greece, Portugal quit euro-zone

    The Age of FallibilityBERLIN (AFP) – George Soros, the US speculator turned billionaire philanthropist, has suggested both Greece and Portugal quit the European Union and the euro-zone because of their massive debts.

    “One has so mishandled the Greek problem that the best way forward at present might be an orderly exit” with Greece leaving both the EU and the euro common currency, he said in an interview published Sunday by the German magazine Spiegel.

    He suggested the same might go for Portugal.

    “The EU and the euro would survive it,” he added.

    Debt-stricken Greece and Portugal are struggling to implement eurozone and International Monetary Fund-mandated reforms, by slashing spending and raising taxes in exchange for financial aid.

    Soros also suggested the time had come for eurozone members to accept the introduction of eurobonds.

    “Whether you like it or not, the euro exists. And for it to function properly, countries sharing the currency must be able to refinance a large part of their debt under the same conditions.2

    Berlin is opposed to the introduction of such bonds, but Soros suggested Germany, as Europe’s strongest financial partner, should be responsible for defining the rules for its introduction.

    Soros, who made over $1 billion by betting against the British pound in 1992, also said he had no intention of playing the market against the common european currency.

    “I am certainly not betting against the euro. Because the Chinese have a huge interest in an alternative to the dollar and will do everything possible to help Europeans save it,” he said.

    Both Greece and Portugal, along with Ireland, have been granted multi-billion EU-IMF rescue loans to prevent them from defaulting on their huge debts.

    nz.news.yahoo.com, August 14, 2011

  • Islam in Greece: Country outlook

    Islam in Greece: Country outlook

    Islam in Greece: Country outlook

    Ioannis Michaletos
    05 Aug 2011
    Points of interest
    Greece is an EU, NATO and Eurozone country which has traditionally strong links with the Islamic world due to the geographical proximity with the Middle East and North Africa and the Ottoman rule that lasted four centuries, along with numerous historical encounters with Islam since the Middle Ages.
    Presently, the country hosts a Muslim minority which is a reminiscent of the Ottoman Empire, but also an expanding Islamic population from the Arab countries and Pakistan that enter Greece in significant numbers as illegal immigrants.Moreover, large corporations in the country, such as banking institutions, tourist companies and real estate ones are in control of Islamic funds, whereas countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey and Libya, can be considered as significant trade partners of Greece.
    In Athens Greece, the Iranian Saderat bank is hosted(1), which is a U.S black-listed institution due to alleged links with Hezbollah (2). Iran covers 25% of Greece’s oil needs per annum and some 15% of its natural gas needs. Furthermore, there are indications that Hezbollah groups are operating in a logistic support basis in Athens by gathering funds through tobacco contraband over the past years (3).
    In a broad sense, Greece due to a mixture of its geographical placement, history and business links, is considered as a gate-away for the Islamic element towards the EU and the Balkans and over the past 10 years it has become one of the main transit territories for Islamic-originating illegal immigration to Europe.
    Until now Greece does not seem to have a particular issue of Islamic fundamentalism. Nevertheless as aptly described in a U.S State Department report on terrorism, “Greece is increasingly an EU entry point for illegal immigrants coming from the Middle East and South Asia and there was concern that it could be used as a transit route for terrorists travelling to Europe and the United States. The number of illegal immigrants entering Greece, especially through the Aegean Sea, increased dramatically in 2008 and 2009, with more than 100,000 illegal immigrants, nearly half of whom originated from North Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, arrested each year” (4).
    Islamist activity in Greece
    Presently in Greece, there seems to be an activity within radical Islamic elements, as well as, gradual projection of Islamic political entities through the use of Greek nationals.
    A revelation by the infamous Wiki Leaks US Dept of State telegrams, showed that, the ex-Ambassador of US in Athens, Mr. Daniel Speckhard, has noted the danger of  the nexus between Greek domestic terrorist groups and Islamic groups, including those from Iran, as he was informed by the then Greek Minister of public Order, Mr. Chrysohoidis (5).
    Furthermore, in a special report by the French daily “Le Figaro”, on the 21st of December 2010, the case of the route of Islamic terrorists from Lebanon to Europe was noted with significant details (6) .
    The article titled “Liban-une filiere djihadiste vers l’Europe”, clearly illustrated the perils involved for Greece as well. More specifically, the Lebanese Army Cornell Mahmoud Issa noted to the French journalists that since November 2010, some 20 extremists managed to escape from a camp where they were kept in Lebanon and found their way to the EU.
    He stated that already the authorities were notified in an international level, although he admitted that this is a difficult task. From their part, the French security authorities believe that this is the case of a new Jihad mission heading towards European metropolises.
    In classified documents that were in possession of radical groups in Lebanon, it was noted, that the individuals named: Karoum Imad Youssef, Ahmad Kayed and Sidawa, managed to leave the camp previously and through Syria and Turkey ventured up to Greece and Bulgaria with the assistance of illegal immigrant transport networks managed by Turks.
    Moreover they managed to acquire fake ID’s and they were finally caught by a common operation of the Bulgarian and Greek authorities. That case according to many reliable sources was closely monitored by the British and French intelligence, due to the fact that these two countries was the ultimate destination of the Lebanese group. Mahmoud Issa, stated that more cases are to be found that evade the authorities so far. In the article Greece is mentioned as a traverse region from where potential terrorists travel on their way to other EU countries.
    French intelligence sources dating back to the pre-9/11 period claimed that organized networks of radical Arab groups that have operated in Greece in the past have been used by al-Qaeda affiliates and other fundamentalist networks (7).
    According to a pre-9/11 French intelligence report, American interests in Greece and Cyprus were considered by Osama bin Laden’s network as targets. Citing a DGSE document, the newspaper “To Vima”, reported that members of the bin Laden network in cooperation with Taliban officials and other armed groups were planning to hijack airplanes between March and September 2000, yet it was never carried out due to various logistical and operational disagreements (8).
    In another notable case, in September 2005, the Moroccan Anwar Mazrar was arrested on the Greek-Turkey border while attempting to travel to Greece on the Istanbul-Thessalonica bus service . Mazrar had been accused of being a leading member of terrorist groups in Morocco and also of having ties with al-Qaeda (10).
    European intelligence agencies have also reported that around 20 Arab fundamentalists have been arrested in Britain, Italy, Portugal, France and the Netherlands for having in their possession forged Greek passports (11).
    Various intelligence sources conclude that the Greek immigration policy has deterred many radical Islamist networks from establishing permanent ties in the country. A security brief issued during the 2004 Olympic Games noted, “The legal environment was for many years an obstacle for the growth and development of organized networks that could operate overtly or covertly using religious and cultural organizations and NGOs as legitimate fronts.” This policy, however, unintentionally leads many groups to go underground.
    The Greek secret service has mapped a transnational network of radicals that has been developing in Greece over the years. Field informants indicate that this semi-legal web spreads across five different communities, including:
    • Mosques and local Muslim communities
    • Humanitarian organizations and NGOs
    • Islamic cultural centres in Europe
    • Foreign political, economic and religious elites
    • International Islamist terrorist organizations
    The key members of this network (referred to as “The Union of Mosques” or “The Union of Imams”) have military training and combat experience and are well connected with terrorist groups, foreign governments and the Muslim Diaspora in Europe (mainly in Britain, Italy and France). They use criminal activities to finance and facilitate their ideological objectives. The most noticeable illegal activities they conduct are passport forging, arms trafficking, people smuggling and drug trafficking. Finally, according to the same sources, the network has developed an internal structure to support fundraising, recruitment and counter intelligence activities (12).
    Greece’s rather recent encounter with domestic radical activities is getting stronger, as the data show regarding the spread of Islamic-driven NGO’s and charity groups.
    Al Jabbar, is a Islamic charity NGO active in Greece over the past five years. According to information of high value, the organization possesses funds in excess of 400,000 Euros and it is actively launching campaign for the raise of another 150,000 Euros in the near term. Furthermore, it has spent 550,000 Euros, in 2008 in order to buy a buiding in the Aeschilus Street, number 37 in the centre of Athens. In the nearby streets, over the past 24 months, there has been a notable increase of houses being bought by Pakistani nationals who pay in cash, although they tend not to reside there or open up businesses. Further, an undisclosed amount of capital, which is estimated at over 2 million Euros was invested between 2007-2009 for the construction of a “Islamic cultural centre” in the district of Moschato in Athens, by Al Jabbar, although details are in flux regarding the actual involvement. A Saudi financier was also involved into assisting this project. The organization claims unofficially to have as much as 45,000 members, although reliable information point out that the actual membership is a few hundred people. The vast majority of its members is illegally residing in Greece and is of Pakistani descent, although the top members come from the Arab countries. There are no data, if there has been a thorough vetting process by the authorities regarding the transfer of these funds or if they derive from legal and taxed charity work. By taking into account the present state of affairs in the Islamic communities in Athens, there are strong indications that the capital was transferred from Arab countries. The Al Jabbar NGO is highly secretive; its members take measures as not to appear in public or have any kind of pubic contact with governmental authorities or the media (13).
    Lastly, a case of interest was the arrest in 2009 of the Iraqi citizen named Abu Sanjad. In this case he was arrested in Athens in July 2009, and he was subsequently sent to Irbil-Iraq, when his identity as a wanted terrorist by the Iraqi government was established. He entered the country, as an illegal immigrant (14).
    Islamism and Society
    Estimates of the recognized Muslim minority, which is mostly located in Thrace, range from 98,000 to 140,000 (between 0.9% and 1.2%), while the immigrant Muslim community numbers between 200,000 and 300,000. Albanian immigrants to Greece are usually associated with the Muslim faith, although most are secular in orientation (15).
    Greece’s Muslim minority is to be found in Western Thrace, the province neighbouring with Bulgaria and Turkey. The first Muslim coming from Anatolia, settled there in 1363 along with the Ottoman Turks in the first European conquest endeavour.
    In 1923 Greece and Turkey agreed to a mass exchange of populations and consequently Greeks resettled from Minor Asia to mainland Greece and vice versa (16). The Muslim minority in Thrace along with the Greek-Orthodox in Istanbul remained as a counterweight to its other and as a symbolic remembrance of the oldest Muslim settlement in Europe and the historical Byzantine – Christian presence in the East respectively.
    The course of events though revealed a systematic extinction of the Greek-Orthodox Christians in Istanbul that number some 5,000 people down from 200,000 in the 1920’s (17). In Western Thrace around 110,000 Muslims reside -45% Turks, 40% Pomaks, 15% Roma-, and constitute about 1% of the total population in Greece and a Quarter of the Western Thracian populous. The strategic importance of the region has often attracted Turkish attention that the Greek government is accusing of sporadically trying to inflame nationalistic or religious divisions between the Muslim citizens and the Christian ones (18).
    A major aspect into examining the present state of affairs in Greece regarding the Islamic element in the country is the influx of illegal immigration, which comes almost exclusively through Turkey.
    Tens of thousands of illegal immigrants from the Middle East see Greece as their destination or point of entry into the EU. Only in 2010, their number was 128,000, the highest in all EU member states (19).
    Moreover, Turkey does not maintain visa regime with Iran (20) and other Middle Eastern countries, thus promoting in effect the movement of Afghans and Pakistanis, as well as, Iranians into Europe.
    The immigrants from the African countries (Somalia,Nigeria) travel to Smyrna, Istanbul and Mersina through vessels crossing the Mediterranean Sea, whilst Arabs come mostly through the Syrian-Turkish borders. The Asians (Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Kurds, and Afghani) pass through the Iranian-Turkish borders and it has to be noted that both countries do not have a visa regime, although Teheran is accused by the world community as a sponsor of terrorism. Therefore the flow of people from Iran to Turkey is in fact unconstrained and there has not been pressure to Ankara to alter this state of affairs with its neighbour.
    Istanbul in particular is the undisputable centre where masses of illegal immigrants concentrate before they are transported to the West. In the Vefa neighborhood right beside the Süleymaniye Mosque, the Iraqi-Kurdish immigrants gather.
    In the Laleli area the most immigrants come from the Caucasus.  In the Aksaray and the Beyazit Meydani regions there are people from all corners of earth pilled in cheap hotels and in the Tarlabasi, African immigrants. In a city of almost 17 million people, it is roughly estimated that between 250,000 & 500,000 of those are illegally residing and waiting mainly to find a way reallocating towards Europe through Greece (21).
    The first official mosque—officially named as: the Greek-Arabic educational and cultural centre—began operating in Athens in June 2007 following fierce opposition by political parties and the general public. The Saudi-sponsored mosque can accommodate more than 1,000 religious followers. The new mosque—which officially operates as a licensed cultural centre and school for Arabic language—was financed by the Saudi businessman El Faouza. The Egyptian imam, Omar Abde Kafi, was invited to be present at the opening of the mosque (22).
    The Muslim Association of Greece (MAG) was founded in 2003 (23) . The MAG claims to represent all Muslims living in Greece. President of the MAG is Naim El-Ghandour an Egyptian born Muslim who lives in Greece since the early 1970s and has acquired Greek citizenship (24). His wife Anna Stamou a Greek convert to Islam is a member of the board of advisors of the MAG (25). She was also administrator of the islamfriends.gr website. Currently (March 2011), she is responsible for the MAG’s public relations and she also works for the greeksrethink.com website (in Greek language) which appeals to Greek converts to Islam all over the world.
    Another important member of the board of advisors of the MAG is Iman Sotiria Kouvali a Greek-Canadian convert to Islam (26). She was founder of the greeksrethink.com website and she is adviser for strategic planning for the MAG. MAG’s official ‘educational’ website is ora-islam.gr. This website was created in early 2010 and seeks to spread knowledge about Islam in Greek language.
    The website islam.gr has as an administrator who is Shadi Ayoubi, a Lebanese journalist and correspondent of the Al Jazeera media empire in Athens (27).
    The Greek-Arabic Cultural Centre is situated in Athens (Moshato area). The Greek-Arabic Cultural Centre, better known as the Islamic Cultural Centre of Athens, was founded in 2001 in the Athens area of Ambelokipi and was relocated in 2007 in Moshato, an area close to Piraeus port. In December 2006 a Saudi businessman named Al-Fauzan bought an old textile factory building at the price of 2.5 million euros, in order to host the Greek-Arabic Cultural Centre. The building of 1,800 m2 also provides a place where Muslims can pray and serves as an informal mosque (28). The new building has a capacity to host 3,000 believers. The Greek-Arabic Cultural Centre is a member organization of the Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe (FIOE) (29).
    The main Dawah activity in Athens is coordinated by the Association named “El-Rahman” which runs the islamforgreeks.org website (30). The association allegedly numbers 1,500 members (Real numbers of active members much less), mainly Greek converts to Islam. The founder and President of the association is Mohi Eldin Ahmed Ali. However, the brain of the association is his son Ahmed Eldin who serves as vice-president. Ahmed Eldin studied Islamic Theology in Cairo-Egypt as well as public relations and journalism in a private college.
    In early February 2011 two Greek converts to Islam (Abu Jassir and Hamza) who are following the Salafi-Wahhabi strand of Islam joined Ahmed Eldin in the islamforgreeks.org website. Abu Jassir and Hamza, (before joining Ahmed Eldin), in partnership with Abu Alia another Greek convert to Islam were propagating the Wahhabi strand of Islam via the YouTube (31). Moreover, Abu Alia according to a report from Radio Free Europe was also actively propagating Wahhabi Islam in the Balkans. An international Wahhabi organization named “Poziv u Raj” (Invitation to Heaven) has launched a campaign in Bosnia-Herzegovina (March 2010) calling on non-Muslims to convert to Islam (32).
    In overall, Greece and especially Athens, already hosts a number of Islamic organizations, which can be classified as NGO’s and immigrant-support groups. They tend to keep a low profile and most of them do not retain a website or make their details publicly available (33).
    Islamism and the State
    Due to the fact that the majority of the Islamic population in Greece and especially the radicalized part of them are mainly interested into establishing themselves on a permanent basis in Western and Northern Europe, the situation is deemed as controllable by the local authorities, something that cannot be guaranteed in the long-term
    Since late 2008, there have been three major cases that show the tendency of creating a rising network of a quasi-radical Islamic element in the Greek society. The first was in the December 2008 riots (34) , were a large number of the people arrested were Pakistanis and Afghanis, some of them claiming to the authorities that were paid in order to participate in the violent demonstrations (35).
    The second development was the May 2009 so-called “Koran demonstrations” (36), when a multicultural group of various Islamic communities in Athens took to the street allegedly claiming that the Police desecrated the Koran during a routine search in the pockets of a Syria street contraband vendor (37).
    Bus stops, 5 shops, one bank and 57 cars, where smashed in and the city centre’s main squares and streets were turned into battle zones for hours. 46 immigrants were arrested, 7 immigrants and 7 police officers were wounded during the clashes (38).
    It was later revealed that this particular individual was lying to the authorities and the press and was involved in various illegal actions including armed robberies (39).
    A third phase was the mass prayer of thousands of Muslims in the centre of Athens in October 2010, without attaining the necessary state permission for that (40). Amongst the organizers they were individuals associated with the Muslim Brotherhood and an Imam was brought by Egypt to commemorate the ending of the Ramadan.
    Small-scale riots started the next few days when they were again false allegations for Koran desecration by the Greek police in the centre of the city (41). It was again proved to be false, but it is more than obvious that a “street mechanism” is being established in the country that facilitates the mobilization of a few hundred “angry Muslims”, and the spread of these kind of news to the media through the use of Greek intermediates along with the umbrella of NGO’s that operate by spending considerable amounts of capital (42).
    In 2005, the “Pakistani abduction case,” took place, in which 28 Pakistani immigrants were allegedly kidnapped by intelligence agents in Athens (43). That case was connected to the cooperation between the Greek and UK authorities following the July 2005 bombings in London, but was also the first notable case of accusation of the Greek state by Islamic organizations that Greece is actively turning against the Islamic element and takes harsh measures in the “war against terror”. The Greek weekly newspaper, “Proto Thema” also disclosed the names of 15 alleged Greek agents and an MI6 spy chief allegedly involved with kidnapping and torturing the Pakistanis eight days after the London bombings of July 7, 2005 (44). There was widespread support by leftist groups mostly that demanded through a series of legal actions and demonstrations the punishment of the Greek and UK security members involved.
    In another case, which was the devastating wildfires in Greece in the summer of 2007 (45), a report, citing US intelligence channels, claimed that an Arabic-language jihad website has urged Muslims in Europe, America and Australia to use arson as a tool of terror. The website apparently cited imprisoned Al Qaeda “theorist” Abu Musab Al-Suri as the ideological progenitor of this plan. While Greece is not specified among the countries to be attacked, and while it is not a contributor of troops to the US-led coalition in Iraq, it has been vital to the war effort by allowing the Americans access to its island bases, transport and other logistical services (46) .
    Further evidence attests to a possible connection between Islamists and the forest fires in Greece. A type of improvised explosive device used in setting off the fires was ignited with a mobile phone (47). By calling the phone’s number, the device exploded, sparking a blaze that soon grew out of control. The advantage for the perpetrators is that this result can be achieved from a safe distance- even from abroad. Significantly, it is similar to one of the methods used in the Madrid bombing in March 2003 and frequently used in IED’s in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Further, a ranking Greek intelligence officer that spoke on the condition of anonymity stated that during the height of the summer fires a Saudi national equipped with such a device was arrested by Greek border police in the north of Greece, in the company of several Kosovo Albanians. It is no secret that the latter consider Greeks to be an enemy, in light of the latter’s historic support for the Serbian point of view regarding the Kosovo issue. Nevertheless, there is evidence, some of it gathered in an August 2007 Jamestown Foundation report, of Greece being used as a transit zone and even potential target for al Qaeda and related groups (48).
    The Greek state authorities have numerously in the recent past, been called upon, to investigate potential Islamic terrorist activity in the country. A warning from Serb intelligence about the mobilization of an extremist Islamic organization in Greece has put the Greek authorities on high alert in 2007. The Serb intelligence briefed a Serb parliamentary Committee that a group of extremists Islamists who are part of the Islamist organization Salaf have become active near Serbia’s southern border.
    “There is no organized Salaf camp in Greece,” claimed an EYP [Greek National Intelligence Service] official responsible for preventing the mobilization of Islamic organizations domestically. Greece, he revealed, “has been used as a crossing for terrorists headed either for the West for the former Eastern Bloc. We also have information that Greece has been used to support Islamic terrorist networks” (49).
    In 2005, immediately after the capture of Anwar Mazrar, who was linked to Al-Qaeda, Europol asked Greece to intensify its investigations into the potential activities of Muslim extremists. As a result, dozens of them, the majority from Pakistan and North African countries, were placed under continuous surveillance. Sources report the authorities are focusing on two North African imams suspected of membership in extremist Islamist organizations in Algeria. Furthermore, US, British, Italian and French intelligence have informed the Greek authorities that members of extremist Islamic terrorist organizations have used Greece as a “support country” (50).
    Towards the end of 2010, various press reports, claimed that radical Islamic action was increasing in the centre of Athens and the issue became widely publicised after it was brought to the Parliament via the LAOS political party that demanded state explanations upon the issue and the proper notification of the security forces (51).
    About 290 mosques operate in Western Thrace and on the islands of Rhodes and Kos.  The only Muslim cemeteries are in Western Thrace. Although they formally have the right to use municipal cemeteries, this practice is reportedly discouraged, and few have done so. A Muslim cemetery is being developed currently in the outskirts of down town Athens. The Greek Orthodox Church has also donated 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2), worth an estimated $20 million, in west Athens for the purpose of a Muslim cemetery (52). The Greek state pledged it will provide 15 million Euros for the construction of the Mosque.
    Generally, Muslims in Greece must pursue burials either in Thrace or other countries. The Treaty of Lausanne also provides powers over some aspects of civil law to muftis in Thrace. These provisions have been respected by the Greek government (53).
    Moreover, there are various evidence that around 120 non-classified or known officially to the authorities, Mosques operate in Athens (54).  According to sources of the Greek daily “Kathimerini” newspaper, the number of unofficial mosques operating in Greece are 75 unofficial mosques (compared to 68 in June 2009), 23 of which have been founded by Pakistani and 15 by Bangladeshi immigrants. According to the same newspaper there are indications that the number of Muslim extremists reaching Greece through illegal immigration is also increasing (55).
    The Greek state, with the Law 3512 of 2006, agreed for the construction of an “Official Mosque” near the city centre. According to the legislation, the Mosque will be classified as an entity administered by a seven-member board that will be composed by state, municipal officials and representatives of the Muslim communities, residing legally in the country. The Mosque has not yet to be constructed due to a variety of bureaucratic, political and social reasons (56).
    Notes:
    1) in.bsi.ir/Greece/default.bsi
    2)http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5329326.stm
    3)”Transnational Threats”, Edited by Kimberley L. Thachuk, Page 92, Praeger Security International, London, 2007
    4)http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2009/140885.htm
    5)http://www.tovima.gr/politics/article/?aid=377454 (To Vima daily newspaper : Wikileaks revelations for Greek security”, 11th of January 2011)
    6)http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2010/12/21/01003-20101221ARTFIG00563-liban-une-filiere-djihadiste-vers-l-europe.php
    7)Greek weekly newspaper “To Vima, April 22, 2007
    8)http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=4347
    9)http://www.iss.org.za/pgcontent.php?UID=19716
    10)Greek daily newspaper, “Ta Nea”, May 15, 2007
    11)Ibid.
    12)Jamestown Foundation, Islamist Terrorism in Europe: Could Greece Be Next? 4 October 2010, by Panos Kostakos, Terrorism Monitor Volume: 8 Issue: 37, available at:
    13)”Terrorism & Organized Crime Database” service, by the faculty of Security Studies of the University of Belgrade and the George C. Marshall Center for Security Studies,  accessed at 19th of March 2011
    14)http://news.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_politics_100056_20/03/2011_436444 (Kathimerini daily newspaper : “Illegal immigration & terrorism; revelations of the Greek Wikileaks”, 20th of March 2011)
    15)http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2006/71383.htm
    16)http://www.hri.org/docs/straits/exchange.html
    17)http://www.answers.com/topic/greeks-in-turkey
    18)http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,CHRON,GRC,,469f3890c,0.html
    19)http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=126456
    20)http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/13/world/middleeast/13turkey.html?_r=1
    21)
    22)Greek daily newspaper, “Eleftherotypia”, May 15, 2007
    23)http://www.equalsociety.com/
    24)http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/articles/2011/01/03/reportage-01
    25)http://www.greeksrethink.com/tag/anna-stamou/
    26)http://www.greeksrethink.com/tag/iman-sotiria-kouvalis/
    27)http://news.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_ell_100062_13/09/2008_284648 (Kathimerini daily newspaper :The unknown Islam in a webpage in Greek”, 13th of September 2008)
    28)http://archive.enet.gr/online/online_text/c=112,dt=22.06.2007,id=45124756 (Elefherotypia daily newspaper: “Saudi Arabian funds finance Mosque in Athens”, 22nd of June 2007)
    29)http://www.euro-muslim.com/En_u_Foundation_Details.aspx?News_ID=211
    30)http://islamforgreeks.org/
    31)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPtJ10QYPXg&feature=related
    32)http://www.rferl.org/content/Wahhabi_Group_Launches_Conversion_Campaign_In_Bosnia/2001137.html
    33)http://www.islamicfinder.org/worldIslamicCountry.php?more=more&startPoint=0&endPoint=50&country=greece&lang=
    34)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_Greek_riots
    35)Interview by Ioannis Michaletos to Polish Times on the Greek riots, English version:
    36)http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.ellada&id=47040 (Elftherotypia daily newspaper : “Clashes with Muslim immigrants”, 23rd of May 2009)
    37)http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/newsbriefs/2009/05/31/nb-06
    38)http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.ellada&id=47040
    39)http://www.analyst-network.com/article.php?art_id=3722
    40)http://archive.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_politics_100006_17/11/2010_121222
    41)http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.ellada&id=225466 (Eleftherotypia daily newspaper : “Muslims clash with riot Police because of the Koran, 19th of November 2010)
    42)Ibid.
    43)http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4763777.stm
    44)http://www.worldsecuritynetwork.com/showArticle3.cfm?article_id=15586
    45)http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/aug/28/helenasmith.international
    46)http://www.worldsecuritynetwork.com/showArticle3.cfm?article_id=15586
    47)http://wn.com/Forest_Fires__Suspected_arson__Athens,_Greece
    48)http://www.worldsecuritynetwork.com/showArticle3.cfm?article_id=15586
    49)Greek daily newspaper “Ta Nea” on 30 November 2007:”Greece Servers As Transit Country for Islamists”
    50)Ibid
    51)http://www.epikaira.gr/epikairo.php?id=2682&category_id=0 (Epikaira weekly political magazine: “Preparations for urban Islamic uprising”, 24th of November 2010)
    52)http://www.islamicpopulation.com/Europe/Greece/Islam%20in%20Greece.html
    53)http://www.euro-islam.info/country-profiles/greece/
    54)http://www.inews.gr/116/i-lista-me-ta-paranoma-tzamia-stin-athina.html,  “The list with the illegal mosques in Athens”
    55)http://news.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_ell_1_24/04/2010_398765 (Kathimerini daily newspaper : “The process for the construction of the Mosque in Athens is accelerating”, 24th of April 2010)
    56)http://www.npr.org/2011/01/21/133121680/Greeks-Divided-On-Mosque-Construction
  • Greece builds a trench to keep out illegal migrants from Turkey

    Greece builds a trench to keep out illegal migrants from Turkey

    Greece has begun work on a trench along its border with Turkey. The trench, originally intended to relieve flood pressure on the river Evros, is also intended to keep out thousand of illegal migrants from Turkey.

    Greek authorities are taking matters in their own hands
    Greek authorities are taking matters in their own hands

    Greece has taken matters into its own hand in its attempt to stem the flow of illegal immigrants arriving from Turkey: it has started building a 120-kilometer moat along the Evros River near the Turkish border. The water-filled trench, one of the Greece largest projects along the river, will be 30 meters wide and seven meters deep, according to the Greek newspapers Ta Nea and Ta Vima. The first 14.5 kilometer section has just been completed near the town of Orestiada in northern Greece.

    “It’s a military operation, officials have kept it secret for the last few months,” said Deutsche Welle correspondent, Christine Pirovolakis, explaining why so little had been heard so far about the trench.

    Greek authorities say more than half a million illegal migrants entered Greece in the past four years. Around 128,000 did so last year alone.

    Greece struggles to meet EU migration rules

    Greece is obliged under European Union rules to prevent migrants without documents from moving on to other parts of the bloc. But Athens says that due to its economic difficulties, it can barely cope.

    EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Cecilia Malmström visited the town of Orestiada in October last year. She agreed at the time that “Greece needed help urgently in creating an efficient asylum system” and that the “humanitarian situation in refugee camps was disastrous.”

    Greece, together with the European Union border agency Frontex, has since increased its sea and land border patrols, fearing the escalating crisis in North Africa and the Middle East could trigger a wave of illegal immigrants.

    Cecilia Malmström in front of an EU flag with stars.Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Brussels is trying to coordinate migrant flow in the EU.“The border in northeastern Greece is so vast, it’s impossible to properly patrol, even with the number of EU Frontex border guards, Greek police and Greek military that are currently up there at the moment,” said Pirovolakis. “You have illegal immigrants coming over the border every five minutes.”

    In January this year the European Union finalized a deal with Greece allowing it to send irregular immigrants back to Turkey. Under the agreement, Turkey is required to take back both its own citizens who enter the EU illegally and citizens of other non-EU states who do the same.

    “Athens is basically depending on Turkey to do this, Turkey hasn’t come through all these months, and so Greece is taking the matter into its own hands now,” said Christine Pirovolakis.

    Author: Wilhelmina Lyffyt

    Editor: Michael Lawton

    via Greece builds a trench to keep out illegal migrants from Turkey | Europe | Deutsche Welle | 04.08.2011.