Category: Greece

  • Turkey increases gas exports to Greece

    Turkey increases gas exports to Greece

    Istanbul – Turkey has begun increasing the volumes of gas it is exporting to neighbouring Greece, after cutting exports by two thirds without warning last week, a spokesman for Greek state gas company DEPA told dpa Monday.

    The spokesman confirmed that the volume of gas DEPA received was expected to return to normal in coming days. They assumed that the cut was due to extremely cold weather in Turkey and much of south-eastern Europe.

    ‘With temperatures rising were expecting the flow of gas to return to normal,’ he said.

    Last week’s cut in exports, starting on February 1st, was the second time in a month that Turkey had reduced the volume of gas it exports to Greece.

    Greece annually imports up to 800 million cubic metres of Azeri gas from Turkey under a deal signed in 2002, with imports beginning in 2007 following the construction of a pipeline link between the two countries.

    via Turkey increases gas exports to Greece – Monsters and Critics.

  • Greece stepping up security on border with Turkey

    Greece stepping up security on border with Turkey

    By COSTAS KANTOURIS Associated Press

    Greek Civil Protection Minister Christos Papoutsis checks part... ((AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis))
    Greek Civil Protection Minister Christos Papoutsis checks part… ((AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis))

    KASTANIES, Greece—Greece announced on Monday that it will soon begin building a 6-mile-long (10-kilometer-long) fence topped with razor wire on its border with Turkey to deter illegal immigrants.

    Thousands of illegal immigrants cross from Turkey into Greece at this point each year, often traveling from there to other parts of Europe.

    Greek Public Order Minister Christos Papoutsis went to the border village of Kantanies on Monday to announce that work on the 13-foot-tall (4-meter-tall) fence will start next month and is expected to be finished by September at a cost of more than euro3 million ($4 million). It will stretch from Kastanies to the Greek village of Nea Vyssa, near the northeastern town of Orestiada.

    “This is an opportunity for us to send a clear message … to all the EU that Greece is fully compliant with its border commitments,” Papoutsis told reporters. “Traffickers should know that this route will be closed to them. Their life is about to get much harder.”

    Greece is one of the 26 European nations in the Schengen Area, which has external border controls but not ones within the zone. Since Greece is on the southeastern edge of the area, and Turkey has not signed the Schengen Agreement, Greece is required to maintain its border controls.

    During Papoutsis’ visit to Kastanies, about 40 people protested nearby, saying the fence is a violation of human rights and should not be built at a time when Greece is suffering a deep financial

    crisis that has led to punishing austerity measures and high unemployment. About 200 riot police stood by, but no violence occurred during the demonstration.

    Papoutsis said the fence will be coupled with a network of fixed night-vision cameras providing real-time footage to the new command center.

    Most of Greece’s 125-mile (200 kilometer) border with Turkey runs along a river known as Evros in Greece and Meric in Turkey. The new fence, which Turkey’s government has not opposed, will block a short stretch of dry land between the two countries. Greece already is receiving emergency assistance at the Evros border from the EU border protection agency, Frontex.

    On Monday, three men seen entering Greece at the point where the fence will be built told The Associated Press they are illegal immigrants who fled Syria’s violence.

    One of the men, who identified himself only as Said, 24, said the trio had been walking for seven days, and that he hopes to reach an uncle in Hungary, which also is a member of Europe’s Schengen Area.

    via Greece stepping up security on border with Turkey – San Jose Mercury News.

  • Children ‘dumped in streets by Greek parents who can’t afford them’

    Children ‘dumped in streets by Greek parents who can’t afford them’

    Children ‘dumped in streets by Greek parents who can’t afford to look after them any more’

    Children are being abandoned on Greece’s streets by their poverty-stricken families who cannot afford to look after them any more.

    Youngsters are being dumped by their parents who are struggling to make ends meet in what is fast becoming the most tragic human consequence of the Euro crisis.

    It comes as pharmacists revealed the country had almost run out of aspirin, as multi-billion euro austerity measures filter their way through society.

    Abandoned: Children are being dumped on Greece’s streets by their poverty-stricken families who cannot afford to look after them any more (file picture)

    Abandoned: Children are being dumped on Greece’s streets by their poverty-stricken families who cannot afford to look after them any more (file picture)

    Athens’ Ark of the World youth centre said four children, including a newborn baby, had been left on its doorstep in recent months.

    One mother, it said, ran away after handing over her two-year-old daughter Natasha.

    Four-year-old Anna was found by a teacher clutching a note that read: ‘I will not be coming to pick up Anna today because I cannot afford to look after her. Please take good care of her. Sorry.’

    Save the Children – Greece is becoming a third world country

    Now even Germany’s economy slips into reverse as expert warns it is likely to enter recession in first months of 2012

    EU threatens Hungary over refusal to implement austerity policies and ‘authoritarian’ new constitution

    Mario Monti warns Germany it must show more support for austerity measures or face increased hostility from Italy

    And another desperate mother, Maria, was forced to give up her eight-year-old daughter Anastasia after losing her job.

    She looked for work for more than a year, having to leave her child at home for hours at a time, and lived off food handouts from the local church.

    She said: ‘Every night I cry alone at home, but what can I do? It hurt my heart, but I didn’t have a choice.’ She now works in a cafe but only make £16 per day and so cannot afford to take her daughter back.

    Sold out: Greece is quickly running out of medicines as austerity measures start to filter through society

    Sold out: Greece is quickly running out of medicines as austerity measures start to filter through society

    Centre founder Fr Antonios Papanikolaou told the Mirror: ‘Over the last year we’ve had hundreds of parents who want to leave their children with us. They know us and trust us.

    ‘Over the last year we’ve had hundreds of parents who want to leave their children with us. They know us and trust us.’

    – Fr Antonios Papanikolaou

    ‘They say they do not have any money or shelter or food for their kids, so they hope we might be able to provide them with what they need.’

    Further evidence of Greeks feeling the pinch of austerity measures is the lack of aspirin and other medicines now available in the country.

    Pharmacists are struggling to stock their shelves as the Greek government, which sets the prices for drugs, keeps them artificially low.

    This means that firms are turning to sell the drugs outside of the country for a higher price – leading to stock depletion for Greeks.

    Mina Mavrou, who runs one of the country’s 12,000 pharmacies, said she spent hours each day pleading with drug makers, wholesalers and colleagues to hunt down medicines for clients.

    And she said that even when drugs were available, pharmacists often must foot the bill up front, or patients simply do without.

    Meanwhile, talks about private sector creditors paying for part of a second Greek bailout are going badly, senior European bankers said tonight.

    That raises the prospect that euro zone governments will have to increase their contribution to the aid package.

    ‘Governments are mulling an increase of their share of the burden,’ said one banker, while another said ‘Nothing is decided yet, but the bigger the imposed haircut the less appetite there is for voluntary conversion.’

    A third senior banker told Associated Press: ‘Private sector involvement is going badly.’

    There are suggestions in euro zone government circles that ministers are coming to the realisation they may need to bolster Greece’s planned second bailout worth 130 billion euros if the voluntary bond swap scheme, which is a key part of the overall package, falls short of expectations.

    Stumping up yet more money would be politically difficult in Germany and other countries in the northern part of the currency bloc.

    via Children ‘dumped in streets by Greek parents who can’t afford them’ | Mail Online.

  • Jobseekers from Greece try chances in Istanbul

    Jobseekers from Greece try chances in Istanbul

    Erdem Güneş / ISTANBUL- Hürriyet Daily News

    The peaceful atmosphere between Turkey and Greece is a major factor in Greeks choosing to seek employment in Turkey, according to Assistant Professor Dimitris Triantaphyllou who came to Istanbul from Athens last year

    Homeless people sit at tables during a New Year’s meal in Athens Jan 1. Greek jobseekers are looking for work in cities like Istanbul. This happens during hard times, like the emigration process after the World War II, says Triantaphyllou. REUTERS photo
    Homeless people sit at tables during a New Year’s meal in Athens Jan 1. Greek jobseekers are looking for work in cities like Istanbul. This happens during hard times, like the emigration process after the World War II, says Triantaphyllou. REUTERS photo

    Turkey – especially Istanbul – stands out as a popular destination for Greeks seeking jobs abroad as Greece suffers a major economic crisis.

    In spite of accusations of “betrayal” by ultra-nationalist Greeks, rapprochement between Turkey and Greece is resulting in increased political, economic and social benefits for both sides, Assistant Professor Dimitris Triantaphyllou, Director of the Center for International and European Studies (CIES) at Kadir Has University, told the Daily News.

    Some 1.2 million people, nearly 10 percent of the population, emigrated from Greece last year, according to recently published statistics in the World Bank’s “The Migration and Remittances Factbook 2011.”

    Triantaphyllou, who came from Athens to Istanbul more than a year ago before Greece was hit hard by the economic crisis, said not only single, educated, young people were leaving Greece, but even some families had begun to emigrate.

    “This happens during hard times, like the emigration process after the Second World War,” he said.

    According to Triantaphyllou the peaceful atmosphere between the neighboring countries, for which he gave credit to late İsmail Cem and Georgios Papandreou, is a major factor in Greeks’ preference of coming to Turkey.

    Psychologist Odysseas Voutsinas moved from Athens to Istanbul last month. Voutsinas was born in Istanbul in 1964 and studied at the Özel Fener Rum Erkek Lisesi before moving to Athens with his family. In the 1960s Turkish-Greek relations were strained over the Cyprus issue, so many Greeks left the country because of the high tension.

    Voutsinas studied social services and psychology in the University of Athens and worked in Greece for 30 years, but he said that he always had the idea of “returning” on his mind.

    ‘Hard to leave, hard to come back’

    Last year he decided to come back. “It was hard to leave Turkey, but it was hard to come back too. The crisis in Greece was maybe a chance for the ones who wanted to come back to Istanbul.”

    Voutsinas said the patriarchate and the Greek community welcomed the newcomers just like the locals did.

    Fouli Koti, 25, came to Istanbul three months ago from Thessaloniki. “I am afraid that the Greek economy is going to get worse. My friends also do not have hope for the near future. They want to leave as well,” she said.

    Koti was working as a manager for a Vodafone franchise store in Thessaloniki. She said that one year ago there were more than 30 stores, but only two remain open in the city. She decided to come to Turkey after a call from her childhood friend Apostolos, who had been living in Istanbul for one year. Koti moved to Istanbul and began working in the customer service department of an international oil company.

    “I wanted to take a risk and have a ‘Turkey adventure,’ but I must say I am disappointed in some ways,” she said. “I was living in one of the most popular districts in Thessaloniki and I was paying 340 euros for a big house of my own. Now I live in the central European side of Istanbul and pay the same amount for a small room in a shared house.”

    January/09/2012

    via LABOR – Jobseekers from Greece try chances in Istanbul.

  • Turkish TV Series Help Greeks Forget Financial Crisis

    Turkish TV Series Help Greeks Forget Financial Crisis

    Turkish TV Series Help Greeks Forget Financial Crisis

    By Stella Tsolakidou on January 7, 2012 in News

    tourkika sirial

    Athens Reuters made an extensive and thorough report on Turkish drama TV series dominating daily Greek TV programmes, with more and more Greeks becoming enthusiastic over the neighboring country’s products.

    Beginning the report with an Athens taxi driver, his Turkish passenger, who happens to be the boss of a company selling Turkish TV series to Greece, and the driver’s wife, who wants to know what is to happen of her favorite protagonists in the coming episodes, Reuters explains how “the glitzy tales of forbidden love, adultery, clan loyalties and betrayal” have become a sort of comfort for recession-hit Greeks.

    The financial crisis plaguing Greece led TV channels to buy Turkish productions in order to save money. But now, it seems that these soap operas are “saving” the Greeks from their everyday problems.

    Some fear this is a cultural invasion but others see it as an opportunity of getting to know the everyday lives of simple people.

    “Kismet”, “Ask ve Ceza”, “Ezel” and “Ask-I Memnu” are only some of the many Turkish series previously broadcast or still on air in Greece.

    The panoramic shots of Istanbul, the awakening of memories related to better times, lost traditions and familiar scenes have skyrocketed the ratings of the Turkish TV series.

    “Ezel” and the other series portray a lost dimension of Greek society that has been buried in recent years,” novelist Nikos Heiladakis wrote in a local newspaper article about the success of one crime drama. “It awakens in today’s Greek a lost identity,” he wrote.

    According to Reuters, Greek fans are so impressed by the new trend that they are already writing Turkish words on their Facebook accounts, while “some Greek magazines have started offering CDs for intensive Turkish lessons.

    via Turkish TV Series Help Greeks Forget Financial Crisis | Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece.

  • Turkey New Migration Alternative for Greeks

    Turkey New Migration Alternative for Greeks

    According to ‘Deutsche Welle’, the citizens of Greek migration to other countries are finding a remedy to the crisis. For the migration of Greeks are generally preferred overseas countries and Western Europe, although the last time Turkey began to be seen as a country of immigration.

    According to a show on a Turkish television program, a woman from Athens and daughter wants to migrate, because she cannot see the perspective of a future in Greece for her daughter, she says. If it is not possible in Istanbul, at least they want to migrate to Australia, she says.

    Professor of International Relations and European Studies Centre, Dimitrius Triantafilu emphasized that many things have changed in the relations between the two countries.

    ‘Turkey as a country of immigration has become almost a recipe for success’ Professor Dimitrius Triantafilu says, stressing that according to statistics, at least two of the world’s top 100 universities are located in Turkey. “Greece has nothing to such”,he said.

    Moreover, Turkey is a very attractive destination not only for its economic development but also for the short distance between Turkey and Greece. Turkey’s everyday life carries similar characteristics to Greek life. This is the main reason for Greek migration to Turkey.

    via Turkey New Migration Alternative for Greeks | Greek Reporter Europe.