Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Στουρνάρας: Δεν παίζουμε με το ευρώ

http://www.nooz.gr/economy/epi8esi-stournara-ston-suriza-gia-tin-oikonomia
ΑΘΗΝΑ 29/04/2014

Για «τριχοτόμηση προσωπικότητας» αναφορικά με το νόμισμα κατηγόρησε ο Γ. Στουρνάρας τον ΣΥΡΙΖΑ στη Βουλή, επισημαίνοντας: «Δεν παίζουμε με το ευρώ. Δεν παίζουμε με το νόμισμα, με τα ιερά και τα όσια. Σταματήστε να ακροβατείτε σε τεντωμένο σκοινί. Ευχόμαστε να κατασταλάξετε επιτέλους».

«Εως σήμερα θεωρούσαμε ότι ο ΣΥΡΙΖΑ έχει δύο απόψεις για το νόμισμα -διχοτόμηση προσωπικότητας το λένε αυτό την ιατρική. Από τη μία η συνιστώσα της δραχμής από Λαφαζάνη και από την άλλη μια περίεργη άποψη, που θέλει ευρώ, αλλά και να χρεοκοπεί όποτε θέλει η χώρα ή να κόβει νομίσμα όποτε θέλει. Ας το πούμε οιονεί ευρώ» είπε.

Ακόμη 35 απολύσεις στον ΟΣΥ για πλαστά στοιχεία

http://www.nooz.gr/greece/osu-ki-alles-35-apoliseis-gia-plasta-pistopoiitika
ΑΘΗΝΑ 30/04/2014


Συνεχίζονται οι απολύσεις εργαζομένων στις Οδικές Συγκοινωνίες μετά τους ελέγχους που διενεργούνται για κατάθεση πλαστών πιστοποιητικών κατά την πρόσληψή τους. Με απόφαση της διοίκησης της ΟΣΥ, που δημοσιεύεται στη «Διαύγεια», από την 1η Μαΐου, απολύονται ακόμη 35 εργαζόμενοι.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Disarray in eastern Ukraine as protest is attacked, mayor is shot

By Griff Witte and William Booth, Published: April 28 E-mail the writers
The Washington Post
DONETSK, UKRAINE — With Ukrainian flags flying high and garlands of flowers in their hair, protesters marched through the heart of this city at sundown Monday.

“East and West together,” they chanted.
But in Ukraine, even such anodyne appeals to unity can be a magnet for trouble. The protesters, including old men and grade-school-age children, were walking into a trap.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Russia complains of large Ukrainian troop buildup in east

By Ralph Ellis, Laura Smith-Spark and Gul Tuysuz, CNN
April 27, 2014 -- Updated 0122 GMT (0922 HKT)
Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- A perilous face-off intensified Saturday when Russia state news complained that Ukraine had mobilized 15,000 troops in the suburbs of Slavyansk in eastern Ukraine "in order to wipe out the city and its residents."
Quoting a Russian Defense Ministry source, RIA Novosti said satellite photos showed the force forming around the city that has become a friction point between the Ukraine military and pro-Russian militants.
The Defense Ministry source said the number of Ukraine troops put the pro-Russian militants at a disadvantage because the latter are "armed only with small amount of pistols and shotguns." Many eastern Ukraine residents have Russian roots and sympathize with Moscow.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Ukraine tense as Russia launches military drills, activists die in clashes

By Laura Smith-Spark, Ben Brumfield and Victoria Butenko, CNN
April 25, 2014 -- Updated 0344 GMT (1144 HKT)
CNN
Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- Tensions in Ukraine escalated sharply Thursday, with Russia embarking on new military drills near the border after Ukrainian forces said they killed five pro-Russian militants.
Ukraine's Interior Ministry said Ukrainian forces killed the militants during operations to take down pro-Russian activists' roadblocks around the southeastern city of Slavyansk.
The Russian response was swift.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said "if the Kiev regime has started to use the army against the population inside the country, it, beyond any doubt, is a very serious crime."

Thursday, April 24, 2014

More Greek Statistics? Troika Confirms Primary Surplus

9:17 am ET Apr 23, 2014
The Wall Street Journal

By  MATINA STEVIS and  CHARLES FORELLE
The European Commission said Wednesday that Greece recorded a primary surplus of €1.5 billion in 2013, overshooting a target of a balanced primary balance and paving the way for the country’s talks on debt relief later this year.

Hurray, many said: Athens has finally met its budget goals, after years of failing to comply with austerity targets that crushed the economy and were later viewed as too tough even by Greece’s creditors. This latest development means that the Greek government can redistribute some of the above-target surplus to its citizens. (In theory, it also means Greece could default on external debt and continue paying pensions and salaries internally from the taxes it raises, but that’s a different story.)

Ukraine’s Military Drive in East Enters Neutral Gear, as Pact on Crisis Is Tested

By ANDREW ROTH and NEIL MacFARQUHARAPRIL 23, 2014
The New York Times
SLOVYANSK, Ukraine — The promised Ukrainian military effort to reassert control over the restive eastern part of the country barely registered on Wednesday, but the Geneva agreement to defuse the crisis in the country frayed even further as the United States and Russia exchanged warnings and accusations of meddling in the region.

The Ukrainian Interior Ministry in Kiev said that it had flushed out armed separatists in Sviatogorsk — a town near Slovyansk, a stronghold of pro-Russian militants in the east — and that no one was injured in the operation. But a Ukrainian military official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said the presence of the militants in the city had been minimal. “You cannot say that there had been a powerful outburst of separatism there,” he said.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Greece qualifies for new debt relief after 2013 budget surplus

BRUSSELS/ATHENS Wed Apr 23, 2014 7:59am EDT
(Reuters) - Greece is set to obtain more debt relief from its international lenders after European officials confirmed on Wednesday that Athens had topped its fiscal targets and achieved a budget surplus in 2013.

Wednesday's announcement come on the fourth anniversary of Greece's official request for a bailout after it lost access to global bond markets. Earlier this month, Greece returned to the markets with the sale of five-year bonds.

The budget surplus is a sign of the progress Greece has made to fix its finances after four years of tough bailout-imposed austerity that wiped out almost a quarter of its GDP and sent unemployment to record highs of almost 28 percent.

Eurostat: Στα 3,4 δισ. ευρώ το πρωτογενές πλεόνασμα για την Ελλάδα

ΕΛΕΝΗ ΒΑΡΒΙΤΣΙΩΤΗ, ΣΩΤΗΡΗΣ ΝΙΚΑΣ
Καθημερινή
23-4-2014
Πρωτογενές πλεόνασμα ύψους σχεδόν 3,4 δισ. ευρώ για τον προϋπολογισμό προκύπτει από τα στοιχεία που δημοσίευσε σήμερα η Eurostat. Συγκεκριμένα, βάσει των κανόνων της Ευρωπαϊκής Αρχής το έλλειμμα Γενικής Κυβέρνησης διαμορφώθηκε στα 23,109 δισ. ευρώ και εξαιρουμένης της στήριξης των τραπεζών, οδηγεί σε πρωτογενές πλεόνασμα 3,4 δισ. ευρώ, στοιχείο ευθυγραμμισμένιο απόλυτα με τις πρόσφατες αντίστοιχες ανακοινώσεις της ΕΛΣΤΑΤ, στις 14 Απριλίου.

President Obama, disregarding his own red line, dithers on Ukraine

By Editorial Board, Published: April 22
The Washington Post
AFTER AN agreement to “de-escalate tensions and restore security” in Ukraine was announced Thursday, Secretary of State John F. Kerry was very explicit about U.S. expectations. “We fully expect the Russians . . . to demonstrate their seriousness by insisting that the pro-Russian separatists who they’ve been supporting lay down their arms [and] leave the buildings” in eastern Ukraine, he said. “I made clear to Foreign Minister [Sergei] Lavrov today that if we are not able to see progress . . . this weekend, then we will have no choice but to impose further costs on Russia.”

Friday, April 18, 2014

UPDATE 1-National Bank of Greece plans senior unsecured bond sale

Thu Apr 17, 2014 4:22am EDT
By Aimee Donnellan
Reuters
LONDON, April 17 (IFR) - National Bank of Greece, rated Caa1/CCC/B-, is preparing to sell the second senior unsecured bank bond from the country in the past four weeks, with fixed income investors increasingly willing to back Europe's most troubled credits.

NBG has mandated Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, HSBC and Morgan Stanley to arrange investor calls and a group presentation in London next week to discuss a possible senior unsecured bond transaction.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Why Ukraine crisis has China in a bind

April 15th, 2014
02:31 PM ET
By Christopher S. Chivvis and Bonny Lin, Special to CNN
CNN

(Editor's note: Christopher S. Chivvis is a senior political scientist at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation and expert in European and Eurasian security issues. You can follow him @cchivvis. Bonny Lin is an associate political scientist at RAND and an expert on Asia-Pacific security issues. The views expressed are their own.)

At Sunday night's emergency U.N. Security Council meeting, Western countries denounced Russian efforts to destabilize eastern Ukraine. Depending on your reading of its statement, China either refused to do the same, or refused to back Russia. Either way, the meeting was just the latest example of how the Ukraine crisis has put China in a bind.

In Ukraine, a crisis of bullets and economics

By Anthony Faiola, Published: April 16
The Washington Post

DONETSK, Ukraine — As pro-Russia militants stormed City Hall here Wednesday, the interim Ukrainian government was battling more than just a separatist problem.

Kiev’s credibility is on the line as the central government tries to persuade residents fearful of economic hardship that their future lies with Ukraine rather than Russia.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

10 Quick Ways to Lose All Your Friends

Jeff Haden  April 12, 2014
TIME Magazine
This post is in partnership with Inc., which offers useful advice, resources, and insights to entrepreneurs and business owners. The article below was originally published at Inc.com.
Want to win friends and influence people? Here are 10 things that ensure you won’t:
1. You thoughtlessly waste other peoples’ time. Every time you’re late to an appointment or meeting says your time is more important. Every time you wait until the grocery clerk finishes ringing you up to search for your debit card says you couldn’t care less if others have to wait unnecessarily. Every time you take three minutes to fill your oversize water bottle while a line stacks up behind you says you’re in your own little world–and your world is the only world that matters.

China economic growth slows to 18-month low in first-quarter

BY ADAM ROSE AND XIAOYI SHAO
BEIJING Wed Apr 16, 2014 2:29am EDT
(Reuters) - China's economy grew at its slowest pace in 18 months at the start of 2014, but did a touch better than expected and showed some improvement in March, suggesting Beijing will not rush to follow up recent steps to support activity.

Authorities have ruled out major stimulus to fight short-term dips in growth, signaling the slowdown was an expected consequence of their reform drive, even as some analysts think the economy will lose further momentum.

Ukraine Suffers Setback in Bid to Confront Pro-Russian Militias

By ANDREW E. KRAMERAPRIL 16, 2014
The New York Times
SLOVYANSK, Ukraine — The opening phase of what the Ukrainian government has called a military operation to confront pro-Russian militants suffered a setback Wednesday morning when six armored personnel carriers flying a Russian flag drove into town here and parked in the central square.

Greece Expects New Record in Tourist Arrivals: Minister

By Eleni Chrepa  Apr 15, 2014 12:55 PM GMT+0300
Bloomberg
Greece’s successful return to bond markets is the most recent in a series of “positive messages” for the economy that included the country posting a record year for tourism and forecasting an even stronger 2014, Tourism Minister Olga Kefalogianni said.

“We have left the big difficulties behind us,” Kefalogianni said in an interview yesterday. “The trend is now turning and we’ll see the Greek economy start recovering this year.”

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Separatists tighten grip on east Ukraine, EU agrees more sanctions on Moscow

BY THOMAS GROVE AND GABRIELA BACZYNSKA
SLAVIANSK/DONETSK, Ukraine Mon Apr 14, 2014 6:21pm EDT
(Reuters) - Armed pro-Russian separatists seized more buildings in eastern Ukraine on Monday, expanding their control after the government failed to follow through on threatened military crackdown leaving Moscow's partisans essentially unopposed.

European foreign ministers agreed to widen sanctions against Moscow and the White House said Washington was seeking ways to impose more "costs" on Russia, for what Kiev and its Western friends call a Russian plot to dismember Ukraine.

Monday, April 14, 2014

The Red Line and the Rat Line

London Review of Books
Seymour M. Hersh on Obama, Erdoğan and the Syrian rebels
In 2011 Barack Obama led an allied military intervention in Libya without consulting the US Congress. Last August, after the sarin attack on the Damascus suburb of Ghouta, he was ready to launch an allied air strike, this time to punish the Syrian government for allegedly crossing the ‘red line’ he had set in 2012 on the use of chemical weapons.​ Then with less than two days to go before the planned strike, he announced that he would seek congressional approval for the intervention. The strike was postponed as Congress prepared for hearings, and subsequently cancelled when Obama accepted Assad’s offer to relinquish his chemical arsenal in a deal brokered by Russia. Why did Obama delay and then relent on Syria when he was not shy about rushing into Libya? The answer lies in a clash between those in the administration who were committed to enforcing the red line, and military leaders who thought that going to war was both unjustified and potentially disastrous.

'Great Stretch' to secure Greek debt return

BY PAUL TAYLOR
PARIS Sun Apr 13, 2014 3:55am EDT
(Reuters) - Call it the Great Stretch.

Two years ago, Greece's debt crisis almost brought the euro zone crashing down.

Now European partners are preparing to ease Athens' debt burden without writing off their loans but by stretching them out into the distant future, extending maturities from 30 to 50 years and further cutting some interest rates, EU officials say.