German tourist family attacked on Crete, search for perpetrators under way
A manhunt has been launched on the island of Crete to find the perpetrators of an attack at the weekend against a family of German tourists in the community of Mylopotamos.
A manhunt has been launched on the island of Crete to find the perpetrators of an attack at the weekend against a family of German tourists in the community of Mylopotamos.
Greece is a pocket of stability with positive prospects. Meanwhile, many governments and political systems in the country’s wider neighborhood are in turmoil.
Every crisis also presents an opportunity, goes the old cliche. But it is also true. In Greece we unfortunately tend to follow every crisis with an endless slanging match over who is to blame and who said what that rarely translates into tangible lessons for the future.
Bidding to bypass Greek shores and avoid possible deterrence, many people smugglers are now heading directly to Italy from Turkey’s Aegean coast, with all the additional perils this entails.
Bulgaria’s interim energy minister said it was “inevitable” that the Balkan country would discuss resuming gas deliveries with Russia’s Gazprom that were halted in April, after the government promised to secure adequate supplies for the winter.
Greek stocks ended slightly lower on Monday, but the session was considered a success, insofar as Athens resisted the downward pressure that brought significant losses to other European markets.
HSBC raised its price targets on shares of Greece’s four largest lenders after they posted strong performances in the first half, saying Eurobank and Piraeus Bank were its top picks.
A six-year-old girl has drowned while swimming at a beach in Corinthia. The girl had gone for a swim at Kalamaki beach with her father. Local media said the girl was pulled from the sea unconscious and rushed to hospital by ambulance, where she was pronounced dead.
Firefighters dealt with 42 new forest fires in the 24 hours up to 6 p.m. on Monday, the Fire Service said on Monday.
A cash-for-passports scheme discontinued by Cyprus in 2020 after a political furor cost the state hundreds of millions of euros in lost revenues from misdirected tax breaks, an independent watchdog said on Monday.