Demand for loans grows in Cyprus
Cyprus banks had a busy first quarter in 2025, handing out 1.24 billion euros in new loans, as falling interest rates sparked renewed interest in borrowing.
Cyprus banks had a busy first quarter in 2025, handing out 1.24 billion euros in new loans, as falling interest rates sparked renewed interest in borrowing.
The total length of the working week in Cyprus in 2024 remained once again above the average working week in the European Union, at 38 hours of work per week for workers in the country, compared to 37.8 in 2014 and 38.4 in 2023, according to data released on Wednesday by Eurostat, the statistical service…
The public demand for accountability is urgent. But justice takes time – not always due to bureaucratic delays, but often because it must carefully examine every detail.
The Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center in Athens has successfully carried out Greece’s first kidney transplants in children with a low body mass index, using organs from living donors.
The balance of power in our region has changed. But this is no cause for defeatism. Perhaps a measure of anger is justified – so long as that anger is transformed into determination, into a will to change our course.
The government has invoked the findings of an expert report to reject opposition criticism over its handling of the deadly Tempe train crash, ahead of renewed parliamentary clashes.
Panos Valavanis, one of Greece’s most distinguished archaeologists and a long-serving professor at the University of Athens, has passed away at the age of 71.
The polling stations at universities across the country closed shortly after 7 p.m., marking the end of this year’s student elections.
The 24th Athens Jazz Festival brings bold, boundary-pushing sounds to Technopolis (100 Pireos), featuring 21 acts from 19 countries.