Health authorities report 89 Covid-19 related deaths
The National Organization for Public Health (EODY) announced 89 deaths related to Covid-19 on Thursday for the preceding week. The positivity rate remained stable.
The National Organization for Public Health (EODY) announced 89 deaths related to Covid-19 on Thursday for the preceding week. The positivity rate remained stable.
An animal park in Athens on Wednesday said it had found a rare white tiger cub under a garbage bin nine days ago.
A railway inspector and two more station masters were charged on Thursday in connection with a massive train collision in northern Greece last week that killed 57 people and injured dozens.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has indirectly put to rest widely circulated reports that the general elections would take place before Orthodox Easter (April 16), government sources said on Thursday, as the cabinet met to discuss the implications of the deadly train collision in northern Greece last week.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis apologised on Thursday for a train crash that killed 57 people, promising to fix long-standing deficiencies in the railway sector and to provide financial support for victims’ families.
A 36-year-old man, previously convicted of trafficking migrants, was arrested in the northern city of Thessaloniki for allegedly abusing the nine-year-old nephew of his former partner in March 2021.
Nikomachi Karakostanoglou and Ilias Papailiakis have joined forces in a project for the Benaki Museum inspired by Greek folk art, customs and history.
Police on Thursday was searching for a man who robbed a foreign currency exchange in western Athens on Wednesday, removing thousands in different currencies.
Ankara’s decision not only to allow the imprisoned father of an off-duty train driver who was killed in last week’s deadly rail accident in central Greece to attend his son’s funeral, but also to serve the rest of his sentence in a Greek prison was seen in Athens as another indication of the significant improvement…
Insufficient checks and safeguards on how EU member countries spend a massive aid program designed to help them bounce back from the crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic are creating possibilities for fraud and mismanagement, the bloc’s financial watchdog warned on Wednesday.