Η ΕΡΕΥΝΑ ΓΙΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΓΝΟΟΥΜΕΝΟΥΣ ΑΥΣΤΡΑΛΟΥΣ ΤΗΣ ΒΕΥΗΣ ΑΡΧΙΖΕΙ‏

Source: Neos Kosmos by Michael Sweet

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Η ΕΡΕΥΝΑ ΓΙΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΓΝΟΟΥΜΕΝΟΥΣ ΑΥΣΤΡΑΛΟΥΣ ΣΡΑΤΙΩΤΕΣ ΤΟΥ ΔΕΥΤΕΡΟΥ ΠΑΓΚΟΣΜΙΟΥ ΠΟΛΕΜΟΥ ΣΕ ΕΞΕΛΙΞΗ

Ο Ελληνικός στρατός έχει αρχίσει την εκσκαφή της περιοχής όπου πιστεύεται να βρίσκεται ο τάφος των Αυστραλών στρατιωτών που έχασαν την ζωή τους τον Απρίλιο του 1941 κατά τη ν διάρκεια της μάχης της Βεύης.

Η εκσκαφή, που διατάχτηκε από την Ελληνική κυβέρνηση, μετά την παρέμβαση του Υπουργού Μακεδονίας-Θράκης, Θεόδωρου Καραόγλου, άρχισε την περασμένη Δευτέρα στη Βεύη.

Η τοποθεσία είχε επισημανθεί πρώτα σε μια αντιπροσωπεία Αυστραλών βετεράνων πολέμου το 1991 που επισκεύφτηκε το χωριό κατά την διάρκεια της 50ής επετείου της Ελληνικής εκστρατείας στο δεύτερο παγκόσμιο πόλεμο.

Περισσότερα από 22 χρόνια αργότερα τα πρώτα βήματα, λαμβάνονται για την εξακρίβωση αυτού του ισχυρισμού.

Ο Ελληνο-Αυστραλός καθηγητής Θωμάς Τσαμούρας από το Νιούκαστλ που έφερε την τοποθεσία στην προσοχή των Ελληνικών αρχών, είπε στον Νέο Κόσμο, ότι η ομάδα ανασκαφής, με επικεφαλής τον Ταξίαρχο Σταμάτη Παναγιώτη από το 1ο Σώμα Στρατού, είχε αρκετά «χτυπήματα» σε ανιχνευτές μετάλλων, από την Δευτέρα που άρχισε η ανασκαφή αλλά δεν βρέθηκαν ανθρώπινα οστά μέχρι στιγμής.

«Είναι πεπεισμένοι ότι η τοποθεσία που φωτογραφήσαμε και τους παραδώσαμε είναι «περίεργη», είπε ο κ. Τσαμούρας στον Νέο Κόσμο.

Κατά τους τελευταίους μήνες ο κ. Τσαμούρας έχει επικοινωνία με την Unrecovered War Casualties – Army (UWCA), την υπηρεσία του Αυστραλιανού στρατού που ερευνά τους ισχυρισμούς αγνοουμένων νεκρών στρατιωτών πολέμου.

Η υπηρεσία που είχε ανοίξει μια δικογραφία να εξετάσει τα αποδεικτικά στοιχεία σχετικά με την τοποθεσία, σύμφωνα με πληροφορίες εξέφρασε απογοήτευση με την Ελληνική απόφαση για την ανασκαφή χωρίς την συμμετοχή στην έρευνα και των Αυστραλιανών αρχών.

Ο κ. Τσαμούρας είπε ότι ενώ είναι ικονοποιημένος που άρχισε η ανασκαφή, «θα ήμουν πιο ευτυχής αν αυτό ήταν μια κοινή επιχείριση με το δικό μας UWCA».

Ο Νέος Κόσμος γνωρίζει ότι τα στοιχεία επικοινωνίας του UWCA έγιναν γνωστά στις Ελληνικές αρχές πριν το ξεκίνημα της ανασκαφής.

Αν ανακαλυφθούν ανθρώπινα οστά και πιστεύεται ότι είναι Αυστραλών στρατιωτών, η UWCA είναι υποχρεωμένη να βρει σε ποιόν ανοίκουν, και αν αυτό προσδιορισθεί, να φροντίσει για την ταφή τους με την Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

Syrian refugees find little to cheer in Greece

Source: TheGuardian

Like so many Syrians fleeing their war-shattered country, Mohamad Alkhalil did not think it could get any worse.

In the space of two years, the 26-year-old had survived a bullet in his foot, severe shrapnel wounds and a long stint in hospital in Turkey and pursuit by the security forces from whom he had defected to sign up with rebel fighters in the Free Syrian Army in June 2011.

“In that time, I have lost 46 members of my family, all in bombardments of our village near Hama,” he says, showing pictures on his iPhone of a succession of relatives, some old, some young, who have died since the start of the conflict.

“My brother Noor was killed on 20 January 2012,” he adds, pointing to man with slicked-back hair standing in front of a Cadillac. “My cousin,” he continues, pointing to a tousled-haired youth in a body bag “was killed a few months later. We were close and, after that, I decided my best option was to go to Europe.”

Alkhalil’s father, a long-time opponent of the Ba’athist regime, had lived in Brussels for years. As Alkhalil lay on a hospital bed in the Turkish city of Antalya, he plotted the journey that would take him to Europe and the embrace of relatives.

But that, the Syrian now believes, is where his real problems began. Sneaking into Greece across the Evros river last summer the reception was anything but warm.

“I thought I was coming to Europe but Greece isn’t Europe,” he says. “The police immediately detained me because I had no papers and then I was put on trial. The first thing the judge asked is ‘why did you defect and join rebel forces? Why did you make such a mistake?’ I was just so shocked.”

For 10 months, Alkhalil found himself being moved from prison to prison across northern Greece. “I was jailed in Alexandroupolis, then Xanthi, then Serres,” he says, noting that at least his experiences had given him the chance to learn Greek – the language in which he tells his story. “After being released last month I’ve been trying to get to Belgium the legal way.”

Alkhalil is far from alone in experiencing such hardship in crisis-hit Greece. Since the onset of their country’s war in March 2011, some 20,000 Syrians have entered Greece, mostly from neighbouring Turkey, according to the Community of Free Syrians Abroad in Athens.

After a fence was erected on the Greek-Turkish land border last year, growing numbers have made sea crossings instead, attempting to reach the eastern Aegean islands of Lesvos, Samos and Chios in dinghies and rickety boats.

“In recent months we have seen a lot of women and children making the journey alone,” said Ashraf Hasno, the community’s general secretary. “Families are being split up in Turkey. It is a heart-rending sight.”

Human rights defenders and immigration experts monitoring the situation in Greece report that Syrian refugees have been repulsed by the Hellenic coastguard, or detained, or summarily deported or refused asylum if they manage to make such a request in the first place.

“Not until 9 April 2013 was there a police decision to release detained Syrian asylum seekers and cease repatriations of Syrians,” says Martin Baldwin-Edwards, who heads the Mediterranean Migration Observatory in Athens. “Many still remain held in custody.” He estimates that some 2,187 Syrians were detected by the coastguard and police in the first five months of 2013.

With its chronically disorganised state apparatus and debt-stricken economy, Greece is not only ill-equipped to deal with the influx but has been widely accused of acting out of blatant disregard for international conventions. “Basically Greece does not believe it has any international obligations under the Geneva convention and doesn’t see why it should host refugees,” says Baldwin-Edwards. “It’s a big mess.”

In the chaos, it has fallen to Syria’s exiled community to provide support. “Almost every Syrian sees Greece as a transit route to Germany or Sweden or some other place in Europe,” said Hasno. “They soon find out how difficult it is and want to leave.”

Alkhalil is the first to agree. “In Syria the situation is very bad,” he says. “But when you get to the country of your dreams and discover there is no freedom, that is even worse.”

Spyridon Gianniotis retains 10K title

Source: Associated Press

BARCELONA, Spain — Spyridon Gianniotis of Greece defended his title in the grueling 10-kilometer open water event at the swimming world championships Monday.

Gianniotis finished in 1 hour, 49 minutes, 11.8 seconds in the waters of Barcelona’s harbor.

Thomas Lurz of Germany was second, 2.7 seconds behind, and Olympic champion Oussama Mellouli of Tunisia was third, 7.4 back.

The women’s 10K is scheduled for Tuesday.

Athens metro extension, four new Line 2 stations to open at noon on Friday

Source: Ekathimerini

The extension of Line 2 on the Athens metro, from Aghios Dimitrios to Elliniko, will be open to passengers from noon on Friday, it has been announced.

Four new stations will be in operation in southeastern Athens: Ilioupoli, Alimos, Argyroupoli and Elliniko.

Seventeen new trains are to be introduced into the Athens metro network to coincide with the opening of the Elliniko extension.

The South Korean-manufactured trains were bought at a cost of 155 million euros to cope with the increase in the number of passengers expected once the Elliniko extension, as well as the ones toward Haidari, Peristeri and Piraeus are completed. The latter is not due until 2017.

The Hyundai Rotem-Hanwha trains have a smart start and stop system that is designed to save energy.

It is expected that an extra 80,000 people will use the metro system once the four new stations on Line 2 open. This will mean 50,000 fewer trips by car in Athens each day, according to transport experts. Passengers will be able to travel from Elliniko in southeastern Athens to Syntagma in the city center in 14 minutes.

Search underway for unrecovered Aussie WWII casualties who died in April 1941 during the Battle of Vevi

Source: Neos Kosmos by Michael Sweet

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Vevi lost soldiers dig begins

The Greek army has begun excavating the alleged unmarked burial site of Australian soldiers who died in April 1941 during the Battle of Vevi.

The dig, sanctioned by the Greek government after the intervention of Minister for Macedonia and Thrace, Theodoros Karaoglou, began last Monday in Vevi.

The location was first pointed out to a delegation of Australian veterans in 1991 who visited the village during the 50th anniversary commemoration of the Greek Campaign in WWII.

More than 22 years later the first steps are being taken to finally ascertain the validity of the claim.

Newcastle school teacher Tom Tsamouras – who brought the alleged site to the attention of the Greek authorities – told Neos Kosmos that the excavation team, led by Brigadier General Panayiotis Stamatis of the 1st Army Corp, had experienced a number of ‘hits’ on metal detectors since the dig began on Monday, but no human remains had been found as yet.

“They are convinced that the area we photographed and supplied to them is ‘unusual’,” Mr Tsamouras told Neos Kosmos.

In recent months Mr Tsamouras has corresponded with Unrecovered War Casualties – Army (UWCA), the Australian Defence Force department responsible for investigating assertions of unrecovered war dead.

The department – that was due to open a case-file to examine evidence relating to the site – has reportedly expressed disappointment at the Greek military going ahead with the dig without it being undertaken in conjunction with Australian authorities.

Mr Tsamouras said that whilst he was delighted that the dig had begun, “I would have been more delighted if this was a joint venture with our own UWCA”.

Neos Kosmos understands that UWCA’s contact details were supplied to the Greek authorities before the dig began.

If remains are discovered that are believed to be those of Australian soldiers, it is the responsibility of UWCA to seek to identify the remains, and if identified, make funeral arrangements with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

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