Lord Byron and Greece | Athens | June 1
The American School of Classical Studies (54 Souidias) presents “Lord Byron and Greece, 200 Years On,” commemorating the bicentennial of Byron’s death at Messolonghi.
The American School of Classical Studies (54 Souidias) presents “Lord Byron and Greece, 200 Years On,” commemorating the bicentennial of Byron’s death at Messolonghi.
There are parts of Greece that were regarded as unlucky until recently because mass tourism hadn’t reached them yet. Now we consider them lucky because they are able to evolve in a measured manner.
A 36-year-old man lost his life after being crushed by a building’s roof near the northern port city of Thessaloniki.
Opposition parties are demanding the resignation of Interior Minister Niki Kerameos following the outcome of Greece’s Personal Data Protection Authority (PDPA) investigation into unsolicited emails sent to the Greek diaspora ahead of the European elections.
The savagery of Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7 was a declaration by Gaza’s leadership that this day would change everything. There would be no return to any kind of normality between the Palestinians and Israel.
The Hellenic Police announced on Monday the seizure of thousands of counterfeit goods during an operation at an east Attica warehouse used by a wholesale trade business.
The Personal Data Protection Authority (PDPA) on Monday imposed a 40,000-euro fine on New Democracy MEP, Anna-Michelle Asimakopoulou and a 400,000-euro fine on the Ministry of Interior for their roles in the voter email leak scandal.
The former foreign minister of North Macedonia and one of the signatories of the name deal with Greece in 2018, Nikola Dimitrov is cautiously optimistic that the Prespa Agreement will survive the recent shift in the political landscape in Skopje.
Cyprus has scrapped a 1.2 billion euro ($1.30 billion) concession agreement for the development of Larnaca port, claiming on Monday the operator awarded the project in 2020 was in breach of contract.
“You need a big fence and you also need a big door,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis commented in an interview for the British podcast “The Rest is Politics.”