News about Greece

thank you dejavu,

we Greeks have the smallest pennis in the world,
we got sub-saharn- mtDNA,
we are unhappy,

what else?


you still have a GREEK AVATAR

are you a small penis too???



:LOL: :LOL: :LOL:
 
I would avoid responding in a case like this. It is clearly intended to provoke one into a fight. We would say that Deja Vu has "an axe to grind" against Greeks.
 
Greek sovereign debt has been the world’s most expensive
http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...sk-raised-by-moody-s-as-bond-aid-readied.html

Protesters gesture as they hold a banner with an EU flag and swastika in the center during a peaceful rally in Athens, Greece.
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=rating-cut-puts-greece-in-debt-hall-of-shame-2011-06-02
rating-cut-puts-greece-in-debt-hall-of-shame-2011-06-02_l.jpg

(Getting help from EU and this is the way to say thank you? Is this European behavior? More like - WE GREEKS THINK ONLY ABOUT OURSELVES AND WANT YOU EUROPEANS TO SPONSOR US WITH FREE MONEY ALL THE TIME OR WE WILL BEHAVE LIKE WE WANT.)
 
Dejavu if you want to start talking about nazis and swastika take a look at this FYROM national event during WW2, maybe your grandfather or relatives are in the video :unsure:


The slavophones saw the bulgarians as liberators during WW2, why is that? they were already in a slavophone country of Serbia! Oh ya, cause they thought and called themselves bulgarians! I guess Tito would be the one to tell them what they "really" are :LOL: God bless Tito!
 
Greece needs a president like cristina kirchner or mr Correa (Ecuador's president)... a strong president with no fear to tell the power institutions (FMI, WB, etc) and powerfull countries (USA, germany)... to stop playing games with their countries and leave us alone.

Greece has to follow the path of the left latin american goverments. There they will find a better life and future.
 
[h=1]DiManno: Greeks are masters of the tax dodge[/h]http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1067546--dimanno-greeks-are-masters-of-the-tax-dodge

ATHENS
In a country where stiffing the taxman is a national pastime, nailing scofflaws requires ingenuity and stealth.
So helicopters were deployed earlier this year to count backyard swimming pools in the Greek capital’s affluent northern suburbs.
The flyover, in conjunction with satellite imagery, produced a shocking aqua-census: 16,974 pools tucked behind high property walls. Yet only 324 households in those areas had ticked the box on their income tax forms admitting to pool ownership.
This was but one example of how upper middle-class Greek citizens hide their assets from the state to avoid levies.
“It had to be done to see how many Greeks had swimming pools,’’ explains Nikos Lekkas, tax-dodge investigator-in-chief as head of planning and programming controls for the internal revenue service.
Such brazen withholding of what’s due The Man goes a long way toward explaining why Greece is in such a fiscal mess. A nation that has fetishized tax-evasion, where residents proudly compare schemes for skirting the system, is on the verge of bankruptcy.
Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos has warned there will be no cash left in the government kitty to pay public salaries and pensions come November if its sugar-daddies — the European Union and International Monetary Fund — don’t pony up the next instalment of promised bailout aid. Bankruptcy will lead to default on government loans held by foreign banks. That would trigger a disastrous domino effect in the Eurozone, with the debt crisis cascading across the continent, already threatening to engulf Italy and Spain.
In truth, there’s tons of money in Greece, below the radar. But the state is up against a cunning adversary in its own people, who’ve become notoriously adept at frustrating all attempts to recover revenue. Both individuals and companies have learned to stash it good, whether in offshore accounts, domestic hidey-holes or by simple nondisclosure of assets. For decades, this phenomenon went unchallenged. Indeed, tax collectors were often in on the scam, accepting bribes to turn a blind eye.
It is with almost grudging admiration that Lekkas recounts the recent discovery of a rural tax Shangri-La, a tiny town called Kranidi in the Peloponnese with only a handful of tax inspectors in situ. Lekkas, to his astonishment, learned that a multitude of businesses including some of Greece’s largest companies had set up corporate headquarters in Kranidi, even if no actual office existed. By such means, their finances went undetected because nobody looked. “It was operating like a small Lichtenstein.’’
Various studies, most notably one by the Federation of Greek Industries in 2010, have estimated that one-third of taxes go unpaid. The government may be losing up to $30 billion a year to tax evasion, in a country with a colossal $400 billion debt, passing the hat around to its European allies.
“The pressure to collect money owed is great,’’ admits Lekkas. “But the party is over. This couldn’t be allowed to continue any longer. Political decisions have been made to end all these practices.’’
A new and detested property tax is being collected through electricity bills to thwart evasion. (Unionists have vowed not to deliver the bills.) A freeze on bank foreclosures against more than 55,000 delinquent borrowers who owe mortgage loans of up to $200,000 is about to expire after being twice extended. And lists have been compiled, released publicly, of chronic tax-ducking cheats in an unprecedented shaming campaign. Upwards of 6,000 businesses were identified as owing $41 billion in taxes and penalties, though critics pointed out that many of the companies had long ago gone bankrupt and disappeared. (Added embarrassment: Top debtor was the state-owned railroad, owing $1.3 billion.)
While these lists currently cover only companies, they will be extended to ordinary citizens once the government finds a legal way to circumvent privacy laws. In any event, individual names have already been leaked through the media. Prominent were doctors, lawyers, notaries, engineers and architects.
“We believe this shaming campaign is effective,’’ says Lekkas. “Greek society has changed. People are embarrassed to be identified, with everyone knowing where their tax evasion has led the country.’’
Authorities recently scrutinized the tax returns of 150 doctors with offices in the upscale Athens neighbourhood of Kolonaki. Half had reported an income of less than $40,000 and 34 doctors claimed less than $13,300 — which put them below the exemption line for paying any tax at all.
That infuriated a working class which has been hammered with a slew of new taxes, salary reductions and job furloughs. In a country characterized by rampant bribery and corruption, there is roiling resentment over minuscule taxes paid by the well-heeled, most acutely symbolized by Greece’s shipping magnates. Lekkas insists the tax department is going after them.
“We are catching people who have been part of the political establishment, even those who are close to the political leadership.’’
But this nation of 11 million has long operated within a parallel shadow economy of undocumented cash transaction — one-on-one exchanges without benefit of receipts, to keep business off the books. It’s estimated the shadow economy accounts for up to 30 per cent of gross domestic product, untaxed. The Greeks have a name for paying on the side: fakelaki — literally, little envelope.
There’s an attack plan for that, too, says Lekkas.
The government will attempt to revamp entrenched culture by forcing receipts to be issued for all transactions, even the purchase of a newspaper from a kiosk. The objective is to track every single expenditure, regardless of the bureaucratic nightmare that ensues from such a paper chase.
To that end, the tax crusade is going digital. On Oct. 3, the government began issuing hundreds of thousands of new swipe cards — the forokarta — that automatically transmit a record of every purchase to the finance ministry. That date is then inserted into each taxpayer’s personal tax file.
The response has been decidedly underwhelming. Most of the cards are still sitting in banks because the undertaking is on a volunteer basis. But it will become compulsory next year.
“Everything will come into a central server,” says Lekkas. “There will be no human interference in the system. That will put an end to bribery, even by tax collectors.”
As well, new laws coming into effect for 2012 will give tax inspectors access to all bank accounts. “We’ll find out which companies are sending their money offshore and who’s been forgetting, shall we say, to pay what they owe the state.”
The broader goal, Lekkas explains, is to convince ordinary Greeks that the state is serious about holding the major tax fraudsters to account because there is precious little faith left between the state and its citizenry.
“Offenders will go to jail,” he vows.
Asked how many high-rolling tax-dodgers have been thrown in the slammer thus far, Lekkas winces.
“Not one.”
Star columnist Rosie DiManno is in Greece looking at the nation’s debt crisis.
 
Mmmmm.... :unsure:

I think that the campaign of hate against Greece is excesive.

More important... is it "expontaneous", or... something else?

(We know that horrible words precede horrible acts)
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20958353

The tourists held by Greek police as illegal migrants

Greek police have stepped up efforts to catch illegal immigrants in recent months, launching a new operation to check the papers of people who look foreign. But tourists have also been picked up in the sweeps - and at least two have been badly beaten.

When Korean backpacker Hyun Young Jung was stopped by a tall scruffy looking man speaking Greek on the street in central Athens he thought it might be some kind of scam, so he dismissed the man politely and continued on his way.

A few moments later he was stopped again, this time by a man in uniform who asked for his documents. But as a hardened traveller he was cautious.
Greece was the 16th stop in his two-year-long round-the-world trip and he'd often been warned about people dressing in fake uniforms to extract money from backpackers, so while he handed over his passport he also asked the man to show him his police ID.
Instead, Jung says, he received a punch in the face.
Within seconds, the uniformed man and his plainclothes partner - the man who had first approached Jung - had him down on the ground and were kicking him, according to the Korean.
In shock, Jung was by now convinced he was being mugged by criminals and began shouting for help from passers-by.
"I was very scared," he says.
It was only when he was handcuffed and dragged 500m (500 yards) up the road to the nearest police station that he realised he was actually under arrest.
Jung says that outside the station the uniformed officer, without any kind of warning, turned on him again, hitting him in the face.
"There were members of the public who saw what happened, like the man who works in the shop opposite the police station, but they were too afraid to help me," he says.
Inside the police station, Jung says he was attacked a third time in the stairwell where there were no people or cameras.
"I can understand them asking me for ID and I even understand that there may have been a case to justify them hitting me in the first instance. But why did they continue beating me after I was handcuffed?" he asks.
Jung was held with a number of migrants from Africa and Asia who had also been rounded up as part of the police's anti-immigration operation Xenios Zeus - named, strangely, after the ancient Greek god of hospitality.
The operation aims to tackle the wave of illegal immigration which over the last decade has changed the face of Athens's city centre.
It is thought that up to 95% of undocumented migrants entering the European Union arrive via Greece, and because border controls make it hard to continue into the rest of Europe many end up stuck in the country.
According to some estimates, immigrants could now make up as much as 10% of the population.

This has been an enormous shock for the country which, until recently, was more familiar with outward rather than inward migration. Now, in the grip of a crippling economic crisis and with a welfare system in meltdown, the government lacks the resources to support this new growing population.
Few people are in any doubt that Greece needs an effective programme to manage its undocumented migrants.
Lt Col Christos Manouras of the Hellenic police force says operation Xenios Zeus, launched last August, has slowed down the flow of illegal immigrants. Anyone who looks foreign, or who has aroused suspicion, may be stopped, he says.
"If someone is stopped by the police and they do not have a valid means of identification we will accompany them to the station until their nationality can be determined," he explains.

"I think that is normal and I would expect Greeks to be subjected to the same treatment abroad."
But while more than 60,000 people have been detained on the streets of Athens since it was launched in August 2012, there have been fewer than 4,200 arrests.
And some visitors to Greece have been detained despite having shown police their passports.
Last summer, a Nigerian-born American, Christian Ukwuorji, visited Greece on a family holiday with his wife and three children.

When police stopped him in central Athens he showed them his US passport, but they handcuffed him anyway and took him to the central police station.
They gave no reason for holding him, but after a few hours in custody Ukwuorji says he was so badly beaten that he passed out. He woke up in hospital.
"I went there to spend my money but they stopped me just because of my colour," he says. "They are racist."
It is impossible to determine how many people have had a similar experience - but enough Americans for the US State Department to issue a warning to its citizens travelling to the country.
It updated its website on 15 November to warn of "confirmed reports of US African-American citizens detained by police conducting sweeps for illegal immigrants in Athens", as well as a wider problem in Greek cities of "unprovoked harassment and violent attacks against persons who, because of their complexion, are perceived to be foreign migrants".
Tourism is a major source of revenue in Greece, especially important at a time when many other businesses are going bust. Anything that deterred visitors in large numbers would be a disaster for the economy.
The Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman Grigoris Delavekouras responded to the State Department warning by issuing a statement that "isolated incidents of racist violence which have occurred are foreign to Greeks, our civilization and the long tradition of Greek hospitality."
It is not only tourists who have been affected.

In May last year a visiting academic from India, Dr Shailendra Kumar Rai was arrested outside the Athens University of Economics and Business, where he was working as a visiting lecturer.
He had popped out for lunch, and forgotten to take his passport with him.
"The police thought I was Pakistani and since they didn't speak English they couldn't understand me when I tried to explain that I am from India," he says.
When passing students saw their lecturer being held by police and lined up against a wall with a group of immigrants they were horrified and rushed inside to tell his colleagues.
Despite protests from university staff who insisted they could vouch for him, the police handcuffed him and marched him down to the police station.
"Some of my Greek colleagues were almost crying with embarrassment," Rai recalls.
"I understand why the police need to ask for identity documents, they are just doing their job. But I think they are too aggressive - in my country only criminals are handcuffed."
He was eventually released but there was an outcry in the Greek media which asked why an esteemed academic invited to the country to share his knowledge should be humiliated in such a way.

Rai says he experienced no racial prejudice during his time in Greece, and does not accuse the police who arrested him of racism.
But in a report for 2012, the Racist Violence Recording Network, a group consisting of 23 NGOs and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, called on the Greek government to "explicitly prevent police officers from racially motivated violent practices" referring to 15 incidents where "illegal acts" had taken place.
There have been a number of reports alleging strong support among the police for Golden Dawn, the ultra-right party that soared in popularity last year, winning 18 seats in June parliamentary elections.
But police spokesman Lt Col Manouras insists that voting preferences are a personal issue.
"Whatever a police officer may feel in their private life, when they come to work and put on the uniform they assume the values of the force," he says.
Greek police have absolute respect for human rights and treat people of all colour and ethnicity as fellow human beings, he says.
"Of course I cannot rule out the possibility that a police officer may have acted improperly," he adds, "but this would be an isolated incident."

He said he could not comment on the cases of Hyun Young Jung and Christian Ukwuorji, as they are under investigation. The Greek Foreign Ministry did not respond to requests to discuss the cases.
When Jung was released from police custody without charge just a few hours after being detained, he says one officer shouted after him, "Hey Korean, go home!"
Instead Jung went straight to the Korean Embassy in Athens and returned with the consul to confront the men who he said hit him.
It took five further visits to the police station, an official complaint from the embassy to the chief of police and 10 days of waiting before the officers involved in Jung's case were named.

Meanwhile the backpacker had published his story on a travellers' blogread by more than 60,000 people.
The case turned into a full-scale diplomatic incident with the Korean ambassador to Greece requesting a meeting with the minister of Public Order, and the Greek Chief of Police, to insist on a fair investigation and just punishment for the officers involved.
Jung, who is now on the last leg of his travels in the US, is still waiting for the police verdict but says that whatever the outcome he will never go back to Greece.
"I travelled through Azerbaijan, Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Armenia but I never felt in as much danger as in Athens," he says.
"Whenever people ask me if they should visit Greece I tell them to go to Turkey instead."
Christian Ukwuorji, who also lodged an official complaint against the police with the help of the American Embassy, has now been waiting for more than six months for an outcome.
He would like to see the men who hit him prosecuted, but says he holds out little hope of any justice.
"The police there are very corrupt and nothing will be done about it," he says. "I have learned that this is how Greece is."









 
^^ Seems like a campaign against the sweeps in Greece. The BBC is very pro-multi-cultural. Guardian as well btw.

BTW South Korea has 99% Koreans.
 

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