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Πέμπτη 12 Νοεμβρίου 2015

Capulet’s & Montagues by Greek National Opera




The 'Megaron' Athens Concert Hall is to host a production of Vincenzo Bellini's classic opera "I Capuleti e i Montecchi" (The Capulets and the Montagues) for six nights, starting next week on November 13.

In his romantic bel-canto masterpiece, Vincenzo Bellini tells his version of the immortal story of Romeo and Juliet, Verona’s star crossed lovers.
This will be the first time that the opera, filled with Bellini’s wonderful, endless melodies, will be presented by the Greek National Opera in co-production with Arena di Verona and the celebrated Teatro La Fenice, where it premiered in 1830. Romeo’s part, which was initially written for a woman’s voice (breeches role), like it was still usual at the time, will be alternately performed by Irini Karaianni and Mary-Ellen Nesi.

Loukas Karytinos will conduct the Greek National Opera orchestra and chorus for six shows in the Athens Megaron on November 13, 14, 15, 18, 20 and 21.

Παρασκευή 30 Οκτωβρίου 2015

Athens Marathon. The Authentic.





Athens at the heart of the Marathon


Eliud Kipchoge, Ghirmay Ghebreslassie, Gladys Cherono and Mare Dibaba are the candidates for the 2015 AIMS Best Marathon Runner Awards


Athens, the birthplace of the Marathon, will be the focus of attention for the international running scene for three days from November 6 to 8. 

Firstly the Association of International Marathons and Distance Races (AIMS) will honour the best marathon runners of the year with the 2015 AIMS Best Marathon Runner (BMR) Awards, at an international Gala to be held in the evening of Friday, November 6. The next day will be marked by the Opening Ceremony for the “Athens Marathon. The Authentic”. This is followed by the high point of the Athens Marathon itself, on Sunday, where the organisers expect more than 16,000 runners to participate.

Τετάρτη 28 Οκτωβρίου 2015

Grave of ‘Griffin Warrior’ at Pylos Could Be a Gateway to Civilizations





He lies with a yardlong bronze sword and a remarkable collection of gold rings, precious jewels and beautifully carved seals. Archaeologists expressed astonishment at the richness of the find and its potential for shedding light on the emergence of the Mycenaean civilization, the lost world of Agamemnon, Nestor, Odysseus and other heroes described in the epics of Homer.

“Probably not since the 1950s have we found such a rich tomb,” said James C. Wright, the director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. Seeing the tomb “was a real highlight of my archaeological career,” said Thomas M. Brogan, the director of the Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Centre for East Crete, noting that “you can count on one hand the number of tombs as wealthy as this one.”

The warrior’s grave belongs to a time and place that give it special significance. He was buried around 1500 B.C., next to the site on Pylos on which, many years later, arose the palace of Nestor, a large administrative centre that was destroyed in 1180 B.C., about the same time as Homer’s Troy. The palace was part of the Mycenaean civilization; from its ashes, classical Greek culture arose several centuries later.

The palaces found at Mycene, Pylos and elsewhere on the Greek mainland have a common inspiration: All borrowed heavily from the Minoan civilization that arose on the large island of Crete, southeast of Pylos. The Minoans were culturally dominant to the Mycenaeans but were later overrun by them.
How, then, did Minoan culture pass to the Mycenaeans? The warrior’s grave may hold many answers. He died before the palaces began to be built, and his grave is full of artifacts made in Crete. “This is a transformative moment in the Bronze Age,” Dr. Brogan said.
The grave, in Dr. Wright’s view, lies “at the date at the heart of the relationship of the mainland culture to the higher culture of Crete” and will help scholars understand how the state cultures that developed in Crete were adopted into what became the Mycenaean palace culture on the mainland.
Warriors probably competed for status as stratified societies formed on the mainland. This developing warrior society liked to show off its power through high-quality goods, like Cretan seal stones and gold cups — “lots of bling,” as Dr. Wright put it. “Perhaps we can theorize that this site was that of a rising chiefdom,” he said.

The grave was discovered this spring, on May 18, by Jack L. Davis and Sharon R. Stocker, a husband-and-wife team at the University of Cincinnati who have been excavating at Pylos for 25 years.

The top of the warrior’s shaft grave lies at ground level, seemingly so easy to find that it is quite surprising the tomb lay intact for 35 centuries.
“It is indeed mind boggling that we were first,” Dr. Davis wrote in an email. “I’m still shaking my head in disbelief. So many walked over it so many times, including our own team.”

The palace at Pylos was first excavated by Carl Blegen, also of the University of Cincinnati, who on his first day of digging in 1939 discovered a large cache of tablets written in the script known as Linear B, later deciphered as the earliest written form of Greek.

Whether or not Blegen’s luck was on their mind, Dr. Davis and Dr. Stocker started this season to excavate outside the palace in hope of hitting the dwellings that may have surrounded it and learning how ordinary citizens lived. On their first day of digging, they struck two walls at right angles. First they assumed the structure was a house, then a room, and finally a grave.
“I was very pessimistic about this,” Dr. Davis said, thinking that the grave was probably some medieval construction, or that even if it was prehistoric it would almost certainly have been robbed. But a few days later, he received a text message from the supervising archaeologist saying, “I hit bronze.”
What he and Dr. Stocker had stumbled on was a very rare shaft grave, 5 feet deep, 4 feet wide and 8 long. Remarkably, the burial was intact apart from a one-ton stone, probably once the lid of the grave, which had fallen in and crushed the wooden coffin beneath.

The coffin has long since decayed, but still remaining are the bones of a man about 30 to 35 years old and lying on his back. Placed to his left were weapons, including a long bronze sword with an ivory hilt clad in gold and a gold-hilted dagger. On his right side were four gold rings with fine Minoan carvings and some 50 Minoan seal stones carved with imagery of goddesses and bull jumpers. “I was just stunned by the quality of the carving,” Dr. Wright said, noting that the objects “must have come out of the best workshops of the palaces of Crete.”

An ivory plaque carved with a griffin, a mythical animal that protected goddesses and kings, lay between the warrior’s legs. The grave contained gold, silver and bronze cups.

The warrior seems to have been something of a dandy. Among the objects accompanying him to the netherworld were a bronze mirror with an ivory handle and six ivory combs.

Because of the griffins depicted in the grave, Dr. Davis and Dr. Stocker refer to the man informally as the “griffin warrior.” He was certainly a prominent leader in his community, they say, maybe the pre-eminent one. The palace at Pylos had a king or “wanax,” a title mentioned in the Linear B tablets, but it’s not known if this position existed in the griffin warrior’s society.

Ancient Greek graves can be dated by their pottery, but the griffin warrior’s grave had none: His vessels are made of silver or gold, not humble clay. From shards found above and below the grave, however, Dr. Davis believes it was dug in the period known as Late Helladic II, a pottery-related chronology that corresponds to 1600 B.C. to 1400 B.C., in the view of some authorities, or 1550 B.C. to 1420 B.C., in the view of others.

If the earliest European civilization is that of Crete, the first on the European mainland is the Mycenaean culture to which the griffin warrior belongs. It is not entirely clear why civilization began on Crete, but the island’s population size and favorable position for sea trade between Egypt and Greece may have been factors. “Crete is ideally situated between mainland Greece and the east, and it had enough of a population to resist raids,” said Malcolm H. Wiener, an investment manager and expert on Aegean prehistory.
The Minoan culture on Crete exerted a strong influence on the people of southern Greece. Copying and adapting Minoan technologies, they developed the palace cultures such as those of Pylos and Mycene. But as the Mycenaeans grew in strength and confidence, they were eventually able to invade the land of their tutors. Notably, they then adapted Linear A, the script in which the Cretans wrote their own language, into Linear B, a script for writing Greek.
Linear B tablets, were preserved in the fiery destruction of palaces when the soft clay on which they were written was baked into permanent form, Caches of tablets have been found in Knossos, the main palace of Crete, and in Pylos and other mainland palaces. Linear B, a script in which each symbol stands for a syllable, was later succeeded by the familiar Greek alphabet in which each symbol represents a single vowel or consonant.

The griffin warrior, whose grave objects are culturally Minoan but whose place of burial is Mycenaean, lies at the center of this cultural transfer. The palace of Pylos had yet to arise, and he could have been part of the cultural transition that made it possible. The transfer was not entirely peaceful: At some point, the Mycenaeans invaded Crete, and in 1450 B.C., the palace of Knossos was burned, perhaps by Mycenaeans. It is not yet clear whether the objects in the griffin warrior’s tomb were significant in his own culture or just plunder.

“I think these objects were not just loot but had a meaning already for the guy buried in this grave,” Dr. Davis said. “This is the critical period when religious ideas were being transferred from Crete to the mainland.”
The Mycenaeans used the Minoan sacred symbol of bull’s horns on their buildings and frescoes, and their religious practices seem to have been a mix of Minoan concepts with those of mainland Greece.

Archaeologists are looking forward to studying a major unlooted tomb with modern techniques like DNA analysis, which may shed light on the warrior’s origin. DNA, if extractable from the warrior’s teeth, may tell where in Greece he was born. Suitable plant material, if found in the tomb, could yield a radiocarbon date for the burial.

This and other techniques allow far more information to be extracted from a rich grave site than was possible with the picks and shovels used by earlier excavators. “We’ve come a long way from Heinrich Schliemann,” said Mr. Wiener, referring to the efforts of the 19th-century German businessman who excavated Troy and Mycene to support his view that the events described by Homer were based on historical fact.

Τρίτη 9 Σεπτεμβρίου 2014

The Belgian group Trio Solista in concert at the Acropolis Museum





This music event is part of the “Things from Belgium”, the long-term cultural program organized by the Embassy of Belgium in Athens.

The Acropolis Museum will welcome the fall with an amazing concert by Trio Solista, consisting of Beatriz Macias on flute, Roeland Henkens on trumpet, and Yannick Van de Velde on piano.

The concert will take place on Friday, September 12 at the Acropolis museum, giving the audience the opportunity to enjoy famous works by George Handel, Alessandro Parisotti, Francis Poulenc, Albert Doppler, Percy Grainger and George Gershwin.

This music event is part of the “Things from Belgium”, the long-term cultural program organized by the Embassy of Belgium in Athens.

Σάββατο 30 Αυγούστου 2014

Classicism and Europe: The destiny of Greece and Italy



An exhibition exploring the birth of Classicism and the legacy of Greece and Italy to Europe was inaugurated at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens on Wednesday evening at 19:30, opening its doors to the public on Thursday.


"It is an impressive exhibition that through 25 exhibits spans an incredible journey through time, from the prehistoric era to the modern age. In reality, we are talking about Greco-Italian civilisation and for this reason one could not easily separate them," Greek Culture and Sports Minister Constantinos Tasoulas said in a press conference at the museum.


Entitled "Classicism and Europe: The destiny of Greece and Italy," the exhibition began in Rome while Greece still held the presidency of the European Union, and comes to Athens now that the EU presidency has been taken over by Italy. It will remain at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens until October 31.


It features 25 works of art spanning a period of 4,500 years, from the early prehistoric civilisations of the Aegean (Cycladic, Minoan and Mycenean) passing through the Archaic era of the 6th century BC - including the Acropolis Kore and the relief of the 'Pensive Athena' - to sculptures representing the rise of democracy in ancient Greece. It continues with the rise of Christianity through Byzantine art and a replica of the Rossano Bible, the oldest illustrated Bible in the world, the Renaissance, featuring works by El Greco and Mattia Preti and continues right up to the 20th century, with works by Giani, Cadorin, Moralis and Parthenis.


The exhibition is organised with the collaboration of the Italian EU presidency and Greece, via the foreign and culture ministries in both countries. The works of art were contributed by the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, the New Acropolis Museum, the Iraklio Archaeological Museum, the Byzantine and Christian Museum, the Greek National Gallery, the Capitoline Museums-Centrale Montemartini, the National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia, the Naples National Archaeological Museum and other archaeological museums in Italy.


It is taking place under the auspices of the Greek and Italian presidents and had more than 85,000 visitors while on show in Italy.

Κυριακή 17 Αυγούστου 2014

Researchers Archaeologists Ready to Enter Tomb in Amphipolis.




Archaeologists are ready to enter the tomb in Amphipolis, northern Greece, which is considered one of the most important discoveries in the country, dated from around 300 BC – the time of Alexander the Great.

Archaeologists have unearthed a 4.5-meter-wide road and 13 steps that lead to the tomb’s entrance, which is guarded by two carved sphinxes. Excavation work will continue until researchers enter the tomb. The discoveries within the tomb are of great importance as they are crucial for accurate dating.
A stone wall, constructed after the burial to protect the tomb, is going to be destroyed. All the pieces of the wall will be kept by the team of archaeologists.

A geophysical prospecting conducted in the monument has shown that there are three areas inside the tomb. Worst-case scenario would be the collapse of the roof which means that the tomb is filled with dirt. In that case, the area will be carefully cleaned in order to protect grave offerings.
When the archaeologists enter the burial space, they will identify if the tomb is robbed. In that scenario, there is a major risk that important discoveries have been removed.
If the tomb is intact, the researchers will be able to give accurate information on the identity of the dead, based on the bones, sex, skeleton’s height and grave goods.
 
Although the tomb is dated from the era of Alexander the Great, archaeologists claim that it is highly unlikely that the Greek king was buried at ancient Amphipolis. However, they believe that an important Macedonian official was buried there.

Πέμπτη 24 Ιουλίου 2014

Jazz nights @ The Historical Museum of Crete



A night full of music and sangria will be held at the Historical Museum of Crete, in the city of Heraklion on July 30.

The quartet Michalis Labrakis & Jazzoo will play jazz, blues and Brazilian music, while the museum’s bar will be serving sangria for those who want to enjoy a drink at the museum's garden or terrace, with a view to the sea.

During the concert, visitors will also have a night tour at the museum galleries, and the new temporary exhibition "El Greco, between Venice and Rome."
 
The museum shop will also be open.

Σάββατο 5 Ιουλίου 2014

Athens: Trendy City-Break Destination



The City of Athens is gaining popularity this season as tourists from traditional and emerging markets are increasing and staying longer, according to the fourth part of a survey carried out at Athens International Airport (AIA) by the Region of Attica in May. More specifically, the survey revealed that 55% of foreign travellers that arrived in May at AIA had chosen Athens-Attica as their final destination. Furthermore, the average overnight stay in the Greek capital in May was 6.5 days. The arrivals increase was from the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy and Russia.

According to respondents of the survey, ancient Greek culture and Greek cuisine were the top 2 factors in attracting visitors, as well as the combination of vacationing in the capital city with day cruises and going to the beach, readily accessible in the Athens-Attica region.

According to Jane Foster’s guide in The Telegraph, the Archaeological Promenade - a 2.5-mile long, pedestrian-only - links all of the city’s major archaeological sites, has made the city centre "infinitely more walkable." She continues: "But visitors don’t come here just for the ancient monuments. Despite the current economic crises, contemporary

Athens boasts one of the most happening nightlife scenes in Europe, from the urban-chic bars around grungy Monastiraki (at the foot of the Acropolis), to the sophisticated lounge-bars and fusion-food eateries of up-market Kolonaki. And somewhat surprisingly, new bars and eateries keep opening, even in times of strife."

Σάββατο 21 Ιουνίου 2014

Domenicos Theotokopoulos (El Greco) between Venice and Rome.




The island of Crete, which is the birthplace of Renaissance master Domenicos Theotokopoulos - better known as El Greco – is kicking off a round of exhibitions in Greece for El Greco Year. The Greek tribute to the painter, marking the 400th anniversary since the old master's death, opens today with the inauguration on June 20 of the exhibition "Domenikos Theotokopoulos between Venice and Rome" at the Historical Museum of Crete in Heraklio.
El Greco Year will also be celebrated with events in other museums in Greece, such as the National Gallery, the Alex Mylonas Museum – Macedonia Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Byzantine & Christian Museum. In addition to 24 works of art on loan from Italy, Spain, Austria, and Bosnia-Herzegovina, many of El Greco’s famous paintings are included in the round of exhibitions. Amongst them are “"Luke the Evangelist" and "The Adoration of the Magi (Shepherds)"from the Benaki Museum.

The exhibition is officially opened at the Historical Museum at 8:00pm on Friday, 20th June 2014 by El Greco Year Organizing Committee President Lina Mendoni, General Secretary of the Ministry of Culture, with HE Mr. Alfonso Lucini Mateo, Spanish Ambassador to Greece, in attendance. The Benaki Museum is to be represented by its director, Professor Angelos Delivorias.

Admission to the temporary exhibition D. Theotokopoulos between Venice and Rome is free, as is attendance at sessions of the international academic symposium on El Greco: The Cretan Years.

Σάββατο 14 Ιουνίου 2014

GoGreece @ World Cup





The time has come for the much-awaited 2014 World Cup, and on June 14, the Greek National Team has its first match against Colombia in Brazil’s Belo Horizonte, with Greece hoping for a great start. The team will then face Japan on June 19, and the Ivory Coast on June 24, completing the first round of games.

The Greek team is currently ranked 10th in the world, with its trademark rock-solid defence as its stronger asset. The defence, which let in just four goals in 10 qualifiers, sealed the team’s place in Brazil. Coach Santos expects the same efficiency against early favourite Colombia, Yaya Toure’s Ivory Coast and Asia champions Japan. Veteran midfielders Karagounis and Katsouranis remain dominant figures, while Samaras, Mitroglou and Salpingidis provide a variety of attacking options.

This summer marks ten years since Greece’s stunning triumph at 2004 Euro Cup in Portugal, and the Greek team hopes to celebrate the anniversary with a successful run at the World Cup. The aim is to go one step further than they did in the 2010 South Africa World Cup and reach the tournament’s knock-out phase. Going further may seem difficult, but, after all, big sports events are made of big dreams, as the team’s 2004 triumph proved. Go Greece!

Κυριακή 8 Ιουνίου 2014

Aristotle's Lyceum (a gymnasium near Athens and the site of a philosophical school founded by Aristotle) open to Public.





Aristotle’s Lyceum, believed to have been established as the ancient philosopher’s seat of learning in 335 BC, opened to the public June 4, after years of preparation. The Lyceum - a plot measuring 11,000 square metres - is located between the Athens Conservatory and the Byzantine Museum.

Recent excavations by the Greek Archaeological Service (archaeologist Effi Lygouri in 1996) in the area of modern Syntagma have revealed that the area immediately to the East of the ancient city wall was filled with ancient cemeteries and factories, and an immense bathing complex of the Roman period. In addition, sections of a broad, ancient road running East -West through this area have been uncovered. These finds merely add to the list of similar buildings, baths, and graves previously found in the Syntagma area.

Excavations in the area of modern Rigillis Street uncovered a structure that has been identified by the excavator as a palaistra in the Lyceum. The site continues to be excavated and studied and has not yet been fully published.
It is one of the sites chosen as part of the green cultural routes program organized by the Culture Ministry’s Directorate of Museums, Exhibitions and Educational Programs. 

The tour introduces attendees to new and exciting information about life in ancient Greece. 

The Lyceum’s official inauguration is expected to take place within the next couple of months.

Παρασκευή 2 Μαΐου 2014

The 3rd Athens Half Marathon to be held next Sunday.



The Hellenic Athletics Federation (SEGAS) and the Municipality of Athens joined forces over the last years and co-organized for the first time in history of the city a mass sport event exclusively held in the streets of the city centre. The Athens Half Marathon was held for the first time on May 2012, while the 2nd Athens Half Marathon was held on March 31st, 2013. Both events experienced major success not only as its organization but as to massive participation as well. 

The City of Athens was brightened by the smiles of more than 10,000 runners and spectators-citizens of Athens who flooded the city, cheering the participants and applauding the personal triumph of each one of them, proving that there is always a way to move forward and achieve more. On the race day, Athens was flooded by thousands of people who seized the opportunity to enjoy the city’s beauty running in the streets of a city free of vehicles. A unique celebration mood characterized both previous events and has set the pace in order for the Athens Half Marathon to be established as an annual key event for the city and its people.

The resonance and appeal of the Athens Half Marathon has left the country’s boundaries. Organizations for all around the world are already planning their participation in the 3rd Athens Half Marathon to be held on May 04, 2014, and this increased interest by itself raises the expectations and responsibilities of the Organizers towards each individual participant and the whole of the Greek society. The Athens Half Marathon on the opening of the tourist season inaugurates a new chapter in t he city’s life.

The Athens Half Marathon is acknowledged as a major national, cultural, tourist and sport event, addressed to all citizens not only of Athens but of the entire country with its four different races (Half Marathon, 5km Road Race, 3km Road Race, 700m race for people with disabilities).

The Athens Half Marathon Organizing Committee invites all runners from around Greece and abroad to join us and take part in this year’s event on May 04, 2014 and lighten again with their smiles the city of Athens.

Πέμπτη 1 Μαΐου 2014

Tripadvisor and Huffington Post place Greece in Top World Destinations

Tripadvisor: Greece in Top World Destinations

Greece is among the world’s top-10 dream destinations according to TripBarometer April 2014: Global Edition, a study that reveals changes in consumer spending plans and worldwide travel patterns and also reports behavioural differences in planning and booking habits of travellers at different life stages. When asked "which countries would you love to visit in the next 24 months if money were no object?" Australia and Italy topped the global wish list, and were followed by the United States, France, New Zealand, Caribbean, Greece, Japan, Spain and Switzerland.

Meanwhile, Greece is included in the 10 dominant destinations of American tourists and tops the list of "dream destinations" for Argentines.

Huffington Post: 13 Reasons Why the Cyclades Are Basically Paradise

The Huffington Post pays tribute to the whopping 220 Cyclades islands, presenting "13 Reasons Why the Cyclades Are Basically Paradise." Spectacular hotels, colourful beaches, unique culinary experiences and breathtaking views are only few of the reasons to look for a slice of heaven in the Cyclades group of islands, "an amazing mix of culture, history, and cuisine, and a natural beauty to rival any of the world's exotic island getaways!"

Τρίτη 1 Απριλίου 2014

Rally Acropolis 2014. First position for Breen and the Peugeot 208!




Craig Breen with his Peugeot 208 T16 made his first official appearance and managed to put his name on the list of the Acropolis Rally winners! It was also the winning debut for the 208 R5 and the first time in the career of the Irish driver to step up on the top of the podium, both in the ERC and internationally. 

He was in fact the winner beyond any doubt since he was on the lead of the overall classification during both days of the rally. Today he faced no problems on the gravel stages and, in fact, not even the counter attack of Bryan Bouffier with his Citroen DS3 RRC was capable of threatening him. On the contrary, whenever needed he speeded up in the special stages, managing in the end to celebrate an impressive win which made the organizers of the Eurosport event to award him with the "Colin McRae Trophy", a prize given to the most spectacular driver of each ERC round.

The second position of the podium was taken by the French Bryan Bouffier, former official test driver of Hyundai, who despite his famous performances on tarmac, was determined to push today on gravel, although without achieving the win. That being said, it is certain that he could have managed to lead in the rally if he had avoided the three mistakes during the two days of the rally that cost him precious time. In any case, his work was not easy since at the beginning of Leg 2, Kajetan Kajetanowicz and his Ford Fiesta R5 were close behind him, pushing for the second overall position. Nevertheless, in the middle of the day, the French speeded up causing the less experienced Poland Rally Champion to fall back in time. Nonetheless, Kajetanowicz gained important points for the rest of the Championship.

Further behind, at the fourth overall position, lies Esapekka Lappi and his factory supported Skoda Fabia S2000. The talented Finn, although he is considered to be one of the key players of ERC, was not competitive in today's gravel stages. Being himself a winner in Latvia Rally, he argued that it would be difficult with R5 and RRC cars since his S2000 was not powerful enough. The fifth position was won by the Portuguese Bruno Magalhaes with his Peugeot 207 S2000 who was troubled throughout the rally by both poor tyre choice and car setup. Anyhow, the former Portugal Rally Champion is more than happy for the final result as he has minimum participation in gravel rallies over the past years. From Rally Azores he will be competing with a Peugeot 208 T16 R5. A few steps behind him lay the Russian Vasily Gryazin with his Ford Fiesta S2000, who was faster on his favorite gravel surfaces today. In fact, had he avoided the flat tyre at the start of the day, he would have managed to take the fifth position from Magalhaes. Jaroslav Orsak with a Skoda Fabia S2000 and Jean Michel Raoux with his Peugeot 207 S2000 were at the seventh and eighth positions, respectively.

The big drama was played at the Production Category, with the leader Erdi Tibor Jr. and his Mitsubishi Lancer EVO IX finishing the last special stage Loutraki 2 with a broken rear suspension, preventing him from reaching the last service park and completing the rally. Thus, the winner of this category was Vitaliy Pushkar with a Lancer EVO X, who also finished the last special stage with problems at the front suspension of his Mitsubishi. Equally exciting proved to be the 2WD category, when the leader of the rally until the penultimate special stage, Zoltan Bessenyey and his Honda Civic Type-R, was passed by the Italian Simone Tempestini. Nonetheless, neither he managed to smile, since the engine of his DS3 R3T failed him at the last stage and the victory passed to the Russian Evgeny Sukhovenko and his Renault Clio R3. Typical Acropolis! Today the Acropolis Rally signaled also the second round of the Greek Championship, with Lambros Kirkos and his Lancer EVO IX being first, followed by Grigoris Nioras and a Subaru Impreza N12 and the Cypriot Kiriakos Kiriakou with a Subaru Impreza N14.

The 60th Acropolis Rally closed with the typical Award Ceremony at the crowded Service Park at Loutraki.

Κυριακή 30 Μαρτίου 2014

Protect Migrant Crime Victims in Greece.






The Greek government should immediately drop plans that would deter migrant victims from reporting law enforcement abuse, Human Rights Watch said today. The government should also reintroduce measures to protect undocumented victims and witnesses of crimes, including racist violence. Parliament is debating these issues as it examines a draft immigration code.

“The government’s last minute proposals targeting migrants who report law enforcement abuse go in exactly the wrong direction,” said Eva Cossé, Greece specialist at Human Rights Watch. “Instead of encouraging victims to come forward, the changes would have a chilling effect and increase existing obstacles for justice.”

On March 19, 2014, Interior Minister Giannis Michelakis introduced an amendment to the draft immigration code providing for the arrest, prosecution, and deportation of migrants who accuse government employees of using violence against them if a prosecutor determines the accusations were false or that there is insufficient evidence to press charges. The controversial amendment was removed twice from the bill last week amid criticism from opposition parties and the government coalition partner, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PA.SO.K.). But the government has indicated it will submit a new version of the amendment this week.

The provision would violate the principle of non-discrimination by limiting access to justice for migrant victims of law enforcement abuse, Human Rights Watch said. It would also reverse the presumption of innocence at the expense of victims and witnesses of law enforcement abuse, by creating a statutory presumption of the guilt of the person filing the complaint if the prosecutor decides to not press charges against a law enforcement officer.

At the same time, the government removed a provision from the bill that would have given prosecutors the authority to grant humanitarian visas to undocumented victims and witnesses of felonies and other serious crimes, including hate crimes. Human Rights Watch has heard repeatedly from victims of racist violence in Greece that the threat by police of possible detention and deportation deterred them from reporting a racist attack or pursuing the case.

The government should immediately reintroduce the humanitarian clause, Human Rights Watch said. In addition, law enforcement officials should be required to suspend any immigration law actions arising from the undocumented status of a victim or witness of an alleged attack, pending a prima facie assessment by a prosecutor of the merits of the complaint about the attack. These provisions would be consistent with the
EU directive on the rights, support, and protection of victims of crime.

“It’s in everyone’s interest in Greece to hold anyone responsible for a violent crime accountable – and that should include law enforcement officers,” Cossé said. “The government should encourage reporting, not threaten victims with arrest, detention, and deportation.”



Let's make change together, Racist Impunity in Greece http://goo.gl/ZWh7p6



Source: Human Rights Watch

Τρίτη 25 Φεβρουαρίου 2014

Uncovering the sounds of Ancient Greek poetry in the London Underground





Verses of Sappho will be heard on Thursday night at the Keats House museum during the inauguration of the event "Greek Poems on the Underground".

Between now and early April, six posters with verses from seven poems will be put up in London's subway system, while the poems will also be posted on hundreds of trains, with millions of passengers able to read them in English.

The event is part of the activities for the Greek EU Presidency, in cooperation with the Greek Embassy in London and the Hellenic Foundation for Culture.

The Keats House was the home of the great British Romantic poet John Keats (1795-1821). During the event, the poem of John Keats dedicated to Homer but also the composition of his great friend Lord Byron devoted to the islands of Greece along with verses by Nikos Gatsos, Constantin Cavafy and lyric poet Anyte (3rd century BC) will also be heard.


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