James G Neuger
John Follain
Bloomberg
European leaders quarreled again over the refugee influx, with fingers pointed at Greece for doing too little to seal its border and at Austria and Slovenia for doing too much.
Conflicting national responses to the expected 1 million new arrivals in 2016 on top of a similar number last year left Germany with the heaviest burden and Chancellor Angela Merkel facing untold political costs.
“We must first avoid a battle among plans A, B and C: It makes no sense at all because it creates divisions within the European Union,” EU President Donald Tusk told reporters after meetings ended in pre-dawn hours on Friday.
"Ό,τι η ψυχή επιθυμεί, αυτό και πιστεύει." Δημοσθένης (Whatever the soul wishes, thats what it believes, Demosthenes)
Friday, February 19, 2016
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Kurds Warn Turkey of ‘Big War’ With Russia If Troops Enter Syria
Henry Meyer
Stepan Kravchenko
Bloomberg
February 18, 2016 — 2:51 PM EET Updated on February 18, 2016 — 5:18 PM EET
Russia has promised to protect Kurdish fighters in Syria in case of a ground offensive by Turkey, a move that would lead to a “big war,” the Syrian group’s envoy to Moscow said in an interview on Wednesday.
“We take this threat very seriously because the ruling party in Turkey is a party of war,” Rodi Osman, head of the Syrian Kurds’ newly-opened representative office said in Kurdish via a Russian interpreter. “Russia will respond if there is an invasion. This isn’t only about the Kurds, they will defend the territorial sovereignty of Syria.”
Stepan Kravchenko
Bloomberg
February 18, 2016 — 2:51 PM EET Updated on February 18, 2016 — 5:18 PM EET
Russia has promised to protect Kurdish fighters in Syria in case of a ground offensive by Turkey, a move that would lead to a “big war,” the Syrian group’s envoy to Moscow said in an interview on Wednesday.
“We take this threat very seriously because the ruling party in Turkey is a party of war,” Rodi Osman, head of the Syrian Kurds’ newly-opened representative office said in Kurdish via a Russian interpreter. “Russia will respond if there is an invasion. This isn’t only about the Kurds, they will defend the territorial sovereignty of Syria.”
Hundreds of armed rebels cross from Turkey into Syria, says monitor
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reports 500 insurgents
and Islamist fighters headed for town of Azaz where anti-Assad forces have lost
ground
The Guardian
At least 500 rebels on Wednesday crossed the Turkish border,
a monitor said, and headed for the Syrian town of Azaz in northern Aleppo
province where opposition forces have suffered setbacks at the hands of Kurdish
fighters.
“At least 500 rebels have crossed the Bab al-Salam border
crossing on their way to the town of Azaz, from which they want to help the
insurgents in the face of gains made by Kurdish forces in the north of the
province,” the head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel,
told Agence France-Presse.
Ankara blast: Turkey vows retaliation for deadly bomb attack
18-2-2016
49 minutes ago
BBC
Turkey has vowed to retaliate against the perpetrators of a
powerful blast in the capital Ankara that left at least 28 people dead and 61
injured.
"Turkey will not shy away from using its right to
self-defence at any time, any place or any occasion," President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan said.
Officials said a vehicle full of explosives was detonated as
military buses were passing by on Wednesday.
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
China 'has deployed missiles in South China Sea' - Taiwan
3 hours ago
BBC
China has deployed
surface-to-air missiles on a disputed island in the South China Sea, Taiwan
says.
Satellite images taken
on 14 February appear to show two batteries of eight missile launchers and a
radar system on Woody or Yongxing Island in the Paracels.
The presence of
missiles would significantly increase tensions in the acrimonious South China
Sea dispute.
China's Foreign
Minister Wang Yi said reports were a Western media invention.
But Mr Wang defended
"the limited and necessary self-defence facilities" on islands
inhabited by Chinese personnel as "consistent with the right for
self-preservation and self-protection.... under the international law".
Migrant crisis: Greece ready to house more on islands
9 hours ago
From the section Europe
BBC
Greece is starting to
register migrants at four new reception centres on islands near Turkey, in line
with a demand from the EU.
Five were supposed to
have been completed by the end of last year. The fifth - on Kos - is not yet
ready.
Merkel unmoved by refugee crisis criticism
Deutsche Welle
Germany will stick to
its multifaceted response to Europe's refugee crisis, including aid delivered
via Turkey, Chancellor Angela Merkel has told parliament. She's also backed the
idea of a no-fly zone in northern Syria.
Merkel, in an address
to Germany's Bundestag on the eve of a two-day Brussels summit, said Europe
should work to improve the lives of refugees in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan as
the way to meet "our goal" of reducing migrant flows into Europe.
She described as
"intolerable" the situation for besieged civilians in and around
northern Syria's war-torn hub of Aleppo, saying "nothing should be left
undone" in trying to establish a no-fly zone to save "many human
lives."
NATO and Europe’s Refugee Crisis
By THE EDITORIAL
BOARDFEB. 16, 2016
The New York Times
The announcement last
Thursday that NATO would send ships to patrol the Aegean in an effort to break
up the smuggling rings ferrying desperate refugees and migrants from Turkey to
Greece is, at this point, more a symbolic show of solidarity than anything else.
Even so, it reflects a heightened sense of urgency about the refugee crisis and
sends a strong signal that the Western alliance stands ready to help Europe
cope with it.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Migration crisis: Plan for reinforced border north of Greece
15/02 23:52 CET |
updated 02:10 mn ago
Euronews
Members of the so-called Visegrad group which is celebrating
its 25th anniversary, are calling for a reinforced border north of Greece to
help stop the flood of migrants into Europe.
Leaders from Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and
Slovakia are proposing to create a second fence along FYROM’s and Bulgaria’s
borders with Greece. (Former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia FYROM).
Monday, February 15, 2016
Britons held in Greece over large guns stash
14 February 2016
BBC
Three men have been arrested in north-eastern Greece on
suspicion of trying to smuggle weapons and ammunition into Turkey, Greek police
say.
Two are British citizens - the third a UK resident. At least
one of them is reported to be of Iraqi Kurdish origin.
The men were in possession of 22 firearms and more than
200,000 rounds of ammunition, police say.
They are suspected of being part of a "criminal
gang". They are due to be charged on Tuesday.
They have reportedly asked to speak in court in Kurdish.
The UK Foreign Office says it is "urgently looking into
the reports".
Visegrad Group opposes Germany's refugee policy
Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic - known as
the Visegrad Group - are set to discuss border protection and the refugee
crisis. They might help Macedonia close its Greek border to migrants.
Deutsche Welle
The four Eastern European countries known for their
restrictive asylum policy are set to call for the closure of the so-called
Balkan route to migrants traveling to Western Europe, German weekly magazine
Der Spiegel reported.
The Visegrad countries - Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the
Czech Republic - invited representatives of Bulgaria and Macedonia to their
summit in Prague on Monday. Leaders of the Visegrad states are expected to
agree on helping Macedonia to block the migrants' path at its border with
Greece, according to diplomats quoted by Der Spiegel.
"As long as a coherent European strategy is lacking, it
is legitimate for the countries along the Balkan route to protect their
borders," Slovakian Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak told the German
magazine. "We will help them with that."
Επιστολή του καθηγητή Ιωάννη Π. Ιωαννιδη (έδρα C. F. Rehnborg του πανεπιστημίου Stanford) προς τον κ. Κυριάκο Μητσοτάκη
O Ιωάννης
Π.Α. Ιωαννίδης κατέχει την έδρα C.F. Rehnborg πρόληψης νοσημάτων στο
πανεπιστήμιο Stanford όπου είναι τακτικός καθηγητής παθολογίας, έρευνας και
πολιτικής υγείας και στατιστικής. Έχει διατελέσει επίσης καθηγητής στα
πανεπιστήμια Harvard, Tufts, Imperial College και Ιωαννίνων και είναι τακτiκό
μέλος της European Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Έχει τιμηθεί με επίτιμους τίλους και ανώτατες διακρίσεις από πολλά πανεπιστήμια και ερευνητικούς οργανισμούς. Τα δύο τελευταία βιβλία του (Τοκάτα για την κόρη με το καμένο πρόσωπο [Κέδρος 2012], Παραλλαγές πάνω στην τέχνη της φυγής και ένα απονενοημένο ριτσερκάρ [Κέδρος 2014]) βρεθηκαν στις βραχείες λίστες του Αναγνώστη για τα καλύτερα βραβεία της χρονιάς. Όπως αναφέρει στην ιστοσελίδα του χαίρεται να διδάσκεται από νέους ανθρώπους όλων των ηλικιών και να του θυμίζουν ότι δεν ξέρει σχεδόν τίποτα.
Έχει τιμηθεί με επίτιμους τίλους και ανώτατες διακρίσεις από πολλά πανεπιστήμια και ερευνητικούς οργανισμούς. Τα δύο τελευταία βιβλία του (Τοκάτα για την κόρη με το καμένο πρόσωπο [Κέδρος 2012], Παραλλαγές πάνω στην τέχνη της φυγής και ένα απονενοημένο ριτσερκάρ [Κέδρος 2014]) βρεθηκαν στις βραχείες λίστες του Αναγνώστη για τα καλύτερα βραβεία της χρονιάς. Όπως αναφέρει στην ιστοσελίδα του χαίρεται να διδάσκεται από νέους ανθρώπους όλων των ηλικιών και να του θυμίζουν ότι δεν ξέρει σχεδόν τίποτα.
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Labels:
Corruption,
Grexit,
Κυριάκος Μητσοτάκης,
Μνημόνιο,
Νέα Δημοκρατία
Friday, February 12, 2016
Πρόσφυγες ή εισβολή;
Του Α
Ανδριανόπουλου
Ισλαμ σε μια χωρα
επιδρα στις εξελιξεις ευθεως αναλογα με τους αριθμους των μουσουλμανων που
βρισκονται εκει. Αν οι αφοσιωμενοι οπαδοι του Μωαμεθ δεν ξεπερνουν το 1% του
πληθυσμου τοτε οι μουσουλμανοι ειναι φιλησυχοι, αγαπουν την ειρηνη και δειχνουν
ετοιμοι να ασχοληθουν αποκλειστικα με την καθημερινοτητα τους. Αυτο ισχυει
απολυτα σε χωρες οπως οι Ηνωμενες Πολιτειες η Αυστραλία η ο Καναδάς με ποσοστο
μουσουλμανων απο 0,08 έως 1,8% .
Thursday, February 11, 2016
NATO Sends Warships to Aegean Sea to Stymie Smuggling, Help With Refugee Crisis
by
ALEXANDER SMITH
CNBC
NATO is
deploying three warships to the Aegean Sea to help stem Europe 's
spiraling migrant crisis, the alliance's chief said Thursday.
Jens
Stoltenberg, NATO's secretary general, said the three ships currently under
German command had been ordered to move to the area "without delay"
to stymie deadly smuggling works.
The vessels
— from Standing NATO Maritime Group 2 — will be deployed to a section of the
Mediterranean called the Aegean Sea, a body of water separating Greece and Turkey
that serves as one of the main arteries for refugees and migrants trying to
enter Europe .
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
EU executive to push Greece, Italy more on migration
Tue Feb 9,
2016 2:47pm EST
The EU
executive will push Greece
and Italy on Wednesday to do
more to control migrants arriving across the Mediterranean, as time runs out for
Athens to fix frontier chaos or be suspended
from Europe 's free travel zone.
EU leaders
will meet next week under growing pressure to get the migration crisis under
control before warmer spring weather encourages a surge of new arrivals.
More than a
million people reached Europe last year,
putting pressure on security and social systems in some EU states and exposing
deep rifts within the 28-nation bloc.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Greece expects bailout review to resume next week: minister
Mon Feb 8,
2016 3:43pm GMT
Reuters
Talks
between the heads of the EU/IMF mission reviewing Greece 's progress and the
government over a tough pension reform plan, fiscal targets and the handling of
bad loans, took a break on Friday after four days of meetings.
Why ring-fencing Greece from Europe won’t solve anything
By Tania Karas February 9, 2016
Reuters
IDOMENI, Greece — The
European Union’s weakest link could become an open-air refugee camp if some
European leaders get their way. Amid concerns that Greece is failing to protect
Europe’s external frontier, calls have grown louder to quarantine it by helping
Macedonia seal its southern border — which refugees must cross to continue
their journeys north — and suspend Greece from the EU’s passport-free Schengen
zone.
Such
proposals would effectively ring-fence Greece from the rest of the EU,
trapping tens of thousands of asylum-seekers in a politically and economically
fragile country with neither the infrastructure nor funds to care for them.
Most migrants know this. Hence, Greece
has never been their destination. It is merely a conduit to more affluent
nations deeper into the continent.
Protests Grow Against Greek Plans to Build Migrant Camps
Residents
on the Aegean island
of Kos block a Greek army
camp
The Wall
Street Journal
By NEKTARIA
STAMOULI
Updated
Feb. 8, 2016 9:48 p.m. ET
17 COMMENTS
Residents
on the Aegean island
of Kos , where locals and
riot police have been clashing daily since Friday, blockaded an army camp where
the government wants to build a migrant registration and screening center,
preventing construction work.
THIS is what could push Greece out of the euro
Holly
Ellyatt | @HollyEllyatt
22 Hours
Ago
The
pressure of thousands of migrants is piling on the pressure on a Greece
struggling with a stagnant economy, rising social tensions and political
pressure and could push the country back towards an exit from the euro zone,
analysts Eurasia Group have warned.
Europe has
been left reeling from the influx of migrants heading to the region, most of
whom are fleeing civil war in Syria
in the Middle East . However, Greece is struggling more than others as it and Turkey have
become the first port of call for the migrants.
Monday, February 8, 2016
Cheap Cigarettes Are Burning Greece's Finances
By Nikos
Chrysoloras
February 8,
2016 — 2:01 AM EET
On an
unremarkable morning on Stournari
street in downtown Athens , just a few blocks away from the
epicenter of every riot the city has seen during its recent crisis years, two
men of Asian origin politely and openly hawk cigarettes to passersby.
The illegal
packs of R.G.D.-branded smokes cost 1.50 euros ($1.70) each, less than half the
price of 20 Marlboros or Prince at one of Greece ’s ubiquitous street kiosks.
As Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras walks another tightrope between creditor demands for
additional belt tightening and a social backlash, the scene exposes an
unhealthy truth: Greeks could smoke, drink and gamble their way out of their
next financial hole, if only they were taxed on all of it.
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