April 2023

‘Are there any Chinese there?’ Greek tourism hit hard by cancellations amid coronavirus outbreak

by Symela Touchtidou EuronewsFebruary 12, 2020 The effects of the Covid-19 coronavirus are not just about those who have caught it. The outbreak has had significant knock-on effects on the Chinese economy, as well as the tourism industry worldwide. In Greece, about 200,000 tourists arrived in 2019 and at least 250,000 were expected this year. …

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Top judge to become Greece’s first female president

by Kerin Hope Financial TimesJanuary 22, 2020 Katerina Sakellaropoulou, a senior Greek judge, has won the overwhelming backing of MPs to become the county’s first female president. The 63-year-old head of the state council, Greece’s highest court, was supported in a vote by 261 deputies in the 300-seat parliament, after securing endorsements from the ruling …

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Katerina Sakellaropoulou: High court judge becomes Greece’s first female president

EuronewsJanuary 22, 2020 High court judge, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, has become Greece’s first female president, after a vote in Parliament on Wednesday. Two opposition parties sided with the centre-right government’s nomination to give Sakellaropoulou 261 votes, way more than the 200 needed. Centre-left opposition parties had already backed Sakellaropoulou’s nomination before Wednesday’s vote. She will take …

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The Greek Debt Crisis: No easy way out

Peterson Institute for International EconomicsJanuary 2020 After World War II, farsighted European leaders sought to overcome centuries of hatred and warfare by striving step-by-step toward economic and political integration. Today an ongoing economic crisis in Greece poses a grave threat to that vision, bearing major lessons for the future of global economic cooperation. Europe’s postwar …

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Greece deploys cultural heritage to lure foreign students

by Kerin Hope Financial TimesJanuary 13, 2020 Greece plans to use its cultural and historical riches to lure Chinese and other foreign students to its universities as part of an overhaul of the state-run higher education system. Niki Kerameus, the education minister, said in an interview that by 2024, she hoped about 40,000 to 50,000 …

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Trapped on Lesbos: the child refugees waiting to start a new life

by Harriet Grant GuardianJanuary 11, 2020 Outside the Moria refugee camp in Lesbos, a shanty town made of tarpaulin strung between olive trees is getting bigger every week. There are now 18,000 people living in this second camp, designed for just over 2,000. Ahmed (not his real name), 17, and his friend Musa wind their …

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Greek economy: will reality collide with fresh optimism in Athens?

by Ben Hall & Kerin Hope Financial TimesJanuary 8, 2020 Odos Lekka, a narrow street in the commercial heart of Athens, has not been this bustling in a decade. Workers are busy refurbishing a drab warehouse left unoccupied during Greece’s prolonged recession. A clutch of new cafés and a smart boutique hotel, one of scores …

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Israel, Greece and Cyprus set to seal €6bn gas pipeline deal

by Ilan Ben Zion & Ayla Jean Yackley Financial TimesJanuary 2, 2020 Israel, Greece and Cyprus are set to sign a trilateral agreement that will lay the groundwork for a planned gas pipeline connecting Israel’s offshore fields with Europe but which risks raising tensions with Turkey over what Ankara sees as its exclusion from the …

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