Man arrested on Skiathos for murder of newborn and mother in Rome
A 46-year-old man was arrested Friday on the Greek island of Skiathos in connection with the murder of a newborn girl whose body was discovered in a park in Rome earlier this week.
A 46-year-old man was arrested Friday on the Greek island of Skiathos in connection with the murder of a newborn girl whose body was discovered in a park in Rome earlier this week.
The former head of ESKE, the National Coordination Center for Operations and Crisis Management was found and arrested Friday in Anavyssos, southeast of Athens, ten days after being found guilty in connection with the deadly 2018 wildfire in Mati, northeast of the capital.
Information technology and business strategy as one – so painstakingly obvious yet so elusive for management teams and board members alike. In Greek leadership fora the debate continues on whether systemic banks could accelerate their digital transformation
Thanks to the impressive proliferation of the IRIS system, Greece is currently among the eurozone countries with the best record in adopting direct payments, Deputy Prime Minister Kostis Hatzidakis told the 9th Payments 360 Conference.
The dramatic developments with the conflict between Israel and Iran took a toll on Greek stocks on Friday.
Greece’s foreign policy has always straddled a structural tension: the pragmatic safeguarding of national interests on one side, and on the other, a deeply ingrained historical self-conception rooted in religious and cultural heritage.
An urgent preliminary investigation has been launched following reports of unauthorized luxury bungalows built inside Schinias National Park, a protected forest area northeast of Athens.
Greece’s highest administrative court, the Council of State, has rejected three legal challenges filed by university professors and the Hellenic Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (POSDEP) against a law allowing non-state universities.
Former German chancellor Angela Merkel, who shaped Europe’s course for nearly two decades, will return to Athens for an exclusive live interview with the executive editor of Kathimerini newspaper, Alexis Papachelas.
It took a few weeks to arrange this remote conversation with Daniel Ziblatt, professor of government at Harvard University and resident faculty associate of the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies. Ziblatt, who co-authored the widely read and prophetic “How Democracies Die” (2018) with Steven Levitsky, director of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin…