Diving into Aphrodite’s Tear
A tourist swims in Giola, also known as Aphrodite’s Tear, a natural pool next to the sea in Thassos island, Tuesday.
A tourist swims in Giola, also known as Aphrodite’s Tear, a natural pool next to the sea in Thassos island, Tuesday.
Nearly 100,000 individuals in arrears of their payments to EFKA, the national social security agency, will be provided with a more favorable repayment schedule, the Employment Ministry says.
Premia Properties plans to expand the Athens Heart mall, south of the city center, into an adjacent property, but first it must settle the 55-million-euro debt to National Bank, the sole creditor of the special purpose vehicle that owns the shopping center.
In a thickly forested park bordered by apartment blocks and a playground, a dozen workers were busy on a recent day with chain saws and axes, felling trees, cutting logs and chopping them into firewood.
“Net-zero emissions” sounds like an ambitious goal, but for most corporations it’s just kicking the can down the road.
Vivartia Group’s catering sector, long considered its weak link because of its indebtedness, appears to be on the way to recovery.
The energy supply crisis and rising inflation are endangering the prospects of projects partly financed through the European Union’s Recovery and Resilience Facility, a report by Bank of America warns.
Foreign investors, such as Bain Capital and the US-based Apollo fund, have shown significant interest in a portfolio of defaulted loans by Greek hotels that debt collector Intrum is selling.
A number of femicides over the past few days serve as yet another reminder of the failure of the authorities to cultivate and develop the reflexes and responses that may have allowed them to save the lives of these women.
The road to Langadia in the mountains of Arkadia in the northern Peloponnese winds through several villages that are full of movement and life.