Exhibition on Apostle Paul opens in Athens
An exhibition has opened in the Roman Agora dedicated to the seminal visit of Apostle Paul to Athens in AD 50-51 during his extensive travels to spread the word of Christianity.
An exhibition has opened in the Roman Agora dedicated to the seminal visit of Apostle Paul to Athens in AD 50-51 during his extensive travels to spread the word of Christianity.
An explosion on a Greek-owned tanker off the coast of Libya could be the result of an ongoing sabotage operation.
Minister of Tourism Olga Kefalogianni attended an event at Athens International Airport (AIA) marking the launch of direct Sichuan Airlines flights connecting Athens, Greece with Chengdu, China, via Istanbul.
The European commissioner for migration, Magnus Brunner, is expected in Athens on Tuesday for policy talks as Greece grapples with a sharp spike in migrant and refugee arrivals, mainly from Libya.
A long-standing demand by the country’s nurses to be inducted into the category of hazardous professions will go into effect on January 1, 2026, Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis vowed on Monday, in a meeting with nursing union representatives.
Cyprus’ tourism sector is proving both vulnerable and resilient.
The preliminary general government fiscal results, which are prepared by the Statistical Service of Cyprus (CyStat), indicate a surplus of 551.2 million euros (1.6% of GDP) for the period of January-May 2025, compared to a surplus of €542.6 million (1.6% of GDP) that was recorded during the period of January-May 2024.
Roxana Saberi felt like she was back behind bars in Tehran, Iran. As she watched Israel’s bombing of Evin prison, the notorious detention facility at the core of Iran’s political repression, she shuddered at memories of solitary confinement, relentless interrogation, fabricated espionage charges and a sham trial during her 100-day incarceration in 2009.
Unfortunately, there are many Greek politicians who, in an effort to serve their voters, cross many red lines. In fact, they treat European funds as “other people’s money,” believing that they can fool the “stupid Europeans.”
An appeals court in Thessaloniki, northern Greece, convicted a 42-year-old man on Monday for running an extortion racket that sought to control the sales of traditional Greek dough fritters known as “loukoumades” on the beaches of the popular Halkidiki peninsula.