Έλληνας έφτιαξε το καλύτερο κοκτέιλ του κόσμου

Source: ΑΜΠΕ

Με ποια συστατικά μπορεί να φτιαχτεί το καλύτερο κοκτέιλ του κόσμου; Την απάντηση στο παραπάνω ερώτημα έδωσε ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος, ο οποίος χρησιμοποίησε λικέρ, βότκα, αλλά και γεύσεις και αρώματα που θυμίζουν Ελλάδα για να δημιουργήσει ένα κοκτέιλ που απέσπασε το πρώτο βραβείο στον Παγκόσμιο Διαγωνισμό Κοκτέιλ.
Ο λόγος για το κοκτέιλ “Skyfall ΙΙ”, με το οποίο ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος εντυπωσίασε τους κριτές του 39ου Παγκόσμιου Διαγωνισμού Κοκτέιλ της Διεθνούς Ένωσης Bartenders και απέσπασε το χρυσό μετάλλιο ανάμεσα στους συμμετέχοντες από 56 χώρες όλου του κόσμου.

“Το ποτό που αιχμαλωτίζει όλα τα αρώματα της φύσης, από φρούτα και βότανα μέχρι μπαχαρικά, αποτελεί την καλύτερη επιλογή. Η νέα τάση της εποχής, που πραγματικά όμως αξίζει, είναι η χρήση σπιτικών – παραδοσιακών λικέρ, βοτάνων, μπαχαρικών και φρέσκων αρωμάτων, που μπορούν να αναδείξουν χυμούς, να δημιουργήσουν δροσιστικά κοκτέιλ”, εξηγεί στο ΑΠΕ – ΜΠΕ ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος.

“Για αυτόν ακριβώς το λόγο, το κοκτέιλ που επέλεξα για τον Παγκόσμιο Διαγωνισμό βασιζόταν σε αρώματα και γεύσεις που θυμίζουν Ελλάδα. Βασικό συστατικό, είναι το λικέρ ιβίσκου που αναδύει ένα υπέροχο άρωμα που σε συνδυασμό με τη βότκα που χρησιμοποίησα χαρίζουν μια αρμονία γεύσεων, αρωμάτων και χρώματος”, προσθέτει.

Η δημιουργία του συγκεκριμένου κοκτέιλ δεν ήταν καθόλου εύκολη, καθώς για να καταλήξει ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος στην τελική συνταγή έκανε περισσότερους από 50 διαφορετικούς συνδυασμούς, «αλχημείες και πειράματα», όπως χαρακτηριστικά λέει.

Το κοκτέιλ αποτελεί εξέλιξη του “Skyfall”, με το οποίο ο ίδιος κέρδισε την πρώτη θέση στον 18ο Πανελλήνιο Διαγωνισμό Κοκτέιλ τον περασμένο Φεβρουάριο. “Το Skyfall που κέρδισε την πρώτη θέση στο Πανελλήνιο, ήθελα να το πίνουν και να αφήνει μία ξεχωριστή γεύση και υφή. Το Skyfall II, που είναι η εξέλιξη του πρώτου, αποτελεί την απόλυτη αποκορύφωση χρωμάτων και γεύσεων. Η μοναδική πολυπλοκότητα τόσων γεύσεων κερδίζει και τους πιο απαιτητικούς ουρανίσκους”, επισημαίνει ο κ. Γκοβάτσος.

Η επιλογή του ονόματος για τα κοκτέιλ που εντυπωσίασαν στον ελληνικό και στο διεθνή διαγωνισμό δεν είναι τυχαία, αλλά παραπέμπει στην ομότιτλη ταινία του Τζέιμς Μποντ και το τραγούδι της Αντέλ. Ευχή του είναι οι δημιουργίες του να παραμείνουν κλασικής αξίας και να αντέξουν στη δοκιμασία του χρόνου, όπως και οι ταινίες του Τζέιμς Μποντ.

Ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος γεννήθηκε στην Καλιφόρνια των ΗΠΑ, αλλά σε μικρή ηλικία ήρθε με την οικογένειά του στη Μονεμβασιά, όπου ζει και εργάζεται μέχρι σήμερα.

Στην ηλικία των 16 ετών ξεκίνησε να δουλεύει ως βοηθός σερβιτόρου και στη συνέχεια ως μπάρμαν, οπότε και κατέληξε, όπως λέει, “ότι το πάθος και το μεράκι μου, θέλω να το κάνω επάγγελμα”.

Με τη συμμετοχή του στον Παγκόσμιο Διαγωνισμό ο Παναγιώτης Γκοβάτσος εκπροσώπησε την Ελληνική Ένωση Μπάρμεν, αφού προηγουμένως είχε κερδίσει την πρώτη θέση στον Πανελλήνιο Διαγωνισμό. “Είμαι ένα άτομο που μ’ αρέσουν οι προκλήσεις, η εξέλιξη και η επαγγελματική καταξίωση στο χώρο μου. Το να συμμετάσχεις σε ένα Διαγωνισμό και πόσο μάλλον Παγκόσμιο, είναι μια πρόκληση. Διάβασμα, σεμινάρια, προπόνηση, τεστ, ήταν μέσα στην καθημερινότητα μου. Αμέσως μετά την πρώτη θέση στον Πανελλήνιο Διαγωνισμό, ξεκίνησα να ψάχνω για τα ιδανικά και ιδιαίτερα υλικά που θα χρησιμοποιούσα”, θυμάται.

Στόχος του και μετά την παγκόσμια πρωτιά, όπως λέει ο ίδιος, είναι να συνεχίσει να φτιάχνει ποτά και κοκτέιλς που θα μετατρέπονται σε αναμνήσεις. “Δεν υπάρχει μεγαλύτερη ευτυχία, αλλά και επιτυχία από ένα χαμόγελο. Αυτή είναι και η μαγεία της δουλειάς αυτής. Δεν υπάρχει κάτι καλύτερο από την προσωπική επαφή. Να συζητήσεις, να ακούσεις τον άλλον και να προσπαθήσεις να τον ανεβάσεις ψυχολογικά στο λίγο χρόνο που έχει”, τονίζει.

O 39ος Παγκόσμιος Διαγωνισμός Κοκτέιλ ήταν μέρος του 62ου ετήσιου συνεδρίου που διοργάνωσε η Διεθνής Ένωσης Barternders και φιλοξενήθηκε στην Πράγα τον περασμένο Αύγουστο. Το εξαήμερο συνέδριο περιελάμβανε την ετήσια γενική συνέλευση της Διεθνούς Ένωσης Bartenders με περισσότερες από 60 χώρες μέλη, workshops και masterclasses, με θέματα τις νέες τάσεις παγκοσμίως στα κοκτέιλ και τα αλκοολούχα ποτά, καθώς και τρεις διαγωνισμούς: Classic cocktail, Flairtending (free style) και non alcoholic.

H Ελληνική Ένωση Μπάρμεν έλαβε μέρος και στις τρεις κατηγορίες με τους Παναγιώτη Γκοβάτσο στο Classic cocktail, τον Κωνσταντίνο Φραντζή, ο οποίος κατέλαβε την 21η θέση στο Flairtending (free style) και τον Παναγιώτη Πάλλη στο non alcoholic.

Η συνταγή του κοκτέιλ “Skyfall II”, που απέσπασε το πρώτο βραβείο, είναι η εξής:
* 4.0 cl Grey Goose La Poire
* 3.0 cl Giffard Pampl’ Hibiscus
* 4.0 cl Finest Call Passion Fruit Puree
* 2.0 cl Monin Pink Graprfruit Juice
* 3.0 cl Lime Juice, Fresh
* 3.0 cl Perrier

Γαρνιτούρα: Blueberry, cranberry, grapefruit, passion fruit, pineapple leaf, carrot, turnip, chili pepper and mint leaf. Μέθοδος: Shake.

6,000-Year-Old Wine Found In Greece; Ancient Samples May Be Oldest Unearthed In Europe

Sourc: TheHuffington

Conventional wisdom agrees that a fine wine generally gets better with age — good news for the 6,200-year-old wine samples unearthed in Greece, huh?

Researchers working at an ongoing dig site in northern Greece recently announced that the final results of residue analysis from ancient ceramics showed evidence of wine dating back to 4200 B.C., according to the Greek Reporter. The excavation, located at a prehistoric settlement known as Dikili Tash, is situated 1.2 miles from the ancient city of Philippi and has been inhabited since 6500 B.C., according to the researchers’ website.

The analysis was not conducted on liquid wine, though. The passing millennia have erased nearly all tangible evidence of the drink, Dimitra Malamidou, a co-director of the most recent excavation, told The Huffington Post in an email.

“All [that] is left from the liquid part is the residue in the surface of the ceramic vases,” she said. “Recent residue analysis on ceramics attested [to] the presence of tartaric acid, indicating fermentation.”

Malamidou is part of a joint Greek-French excavation that began in 2008. The team recently wrapped up excavation of a neolithic house from around 4500 B.C. This is where they found wine traces in the form of “some thousands of carbonized grape pips together with the skins indicating grape pressing,” Malamidou said.

Radiocarbon dating was used to pinpoint the age of the finds.

Dikili Tash researchers believe they have found the oldest known traces of wine in Europe. Previous studies have unearthed a 6,100-year-old Armenian winery, as well as traces of a 9,000-year-old Chinese alcohol made from rice, honey and fruit.

“The find is highly significant for the European prehistory, because it is for the moment the oldest indication for vinification in Europe,” Malamidou said. “The historical meaning of our discovery is important for the Aegean and the European prehistory, as it gives evidence of early developments of the agricultural and diet practices, affecting social processes.”

The societal changes that may have been influenced by the consumption of alcoholic beverages is currently an issue of debate among researchers, Malamidou said. Evidence of wine during this early time period will “shed new light” on these discussions, she said.

As Germans Push Austerity, Greeks Press Back

Source: nytimes

Angelos Tzortzinis for The New York Times

Giannis Syngelakis at a mass grave in Amiras, Greece, for local men killed by the Nazis.

Residents of Amiras gathered for a Mass for victims of the Nazis.

Mr. Syngelakis, who was 7 then, still wants payback. And in pursuing a demand for reparations from Germany, he reflects a growing movement here, fueled not just by historical grievances but also by deep resentment among his countrymen over Germany’s current power to dictate budget austerity to the fiscally crippled Greek government.

Germany may now be Greece’s stern banker now, say those who are seeking reparations, but before it goes too far down that road, it should pay off its own debts to Greece.

“Maybe some of us have not paid our taxes,” Mr. Syngelakis said, standing beside the olive tree where his father died 70 years ago. “But that is nothing compared to what they did.”

It is not just aging victims of the Nazi occupation who are demanding a full accounting. Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’s government has compiled an 80-page report on reparations and a huge, never-repaid loan the nation was forced to make under Nazi occupation from 1941 to 1945.

Mr. Samaras has sent the report to Greece’s Legal Council of State, the agency that would build a legal case or handle settlement negotiations. But whether the government will press the issue with Germany remains unclear.

Some political analysts are doubtful that Athens will be willing to take on the Germans, who have provided more to the country’s bailout package than any other European nation.

Others, however, believe that the claims — particularly over the forced loan — could be an important bargaining chip in the months ahead as Greece and its creditors are expected to discuss ways to ease its enormous debt burden. Few here think it was an accident that details of the report were leaked to the Greek newspaper Real News on Sept. 22, the day that Germans went to the polls to hand a victory to Germany’s tough-talking chancellor, Angela Merkel.

“I can see a situation where it is politically difficult for the Germans to ease the terms for us,” said one high-ranking Greek official, who did not want his name used because he was not authorized to speak on the issue. “So instead, they agree to pay back the occupation loan. Maybe it is easier to sell that to the German public.”

So far, the Germans have given little indication that they are so inclined. During his latest visit to Athens in July, Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, said, “We must examine exactly what happened in Greece.” But he insisted that Greece had waived its rights on the issue long ago.

The call for reparations has elicited an emotional outpouring in Greece, where six years of brutal recession and harsh austerity measures have left many Greeks hostile toward Germany. Rarely does a week go by without another report in the news about, as one newspaper put it in a headline, “What Germany Owes Us.”

The main opposition party, Syriza, has seized on the issue as well, with its leader, Alexis Tsipras, barnstorming across the country promising action to enthusiastic applause.

Estimates of how much money is at stake vary wildly. The government report does not cite a total. The figure most often discussed is $220 billion, an estimate for infrastructure damage alone put forward by Manolis Glezos, a member of Parliament and a former resistance fighter who is pressing for reparations. That amount equals about half the country’s debt.

Some members of the National Council on Reparations, an advocacy group, are calling for more than $677 billion to cover stolen artifacts, damage to the economy and to the infrastructure, as well as the bank loan and individual claims.

Even the figure for the bank loan is in dispute. The loan was made in Greek drachmas at a time of hyperinflation 70 years ago. Translating that into today’s currency is difficult, and the question of how much interest should be assessed is subject to debate. One conservative estimate by a former finance minister puts the debt from the loan at only $24 billion.

It is not hard to see why the issue is so attractive to many Greeks. It offers, if nothing else, a chance to take Germany down a peg. The last six years have hit Greek pride hard. Some here feel that the country’s officials are merely puppets these days, imposing whatever solutions the country’s creditors — the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the European Central Bank — come up with.

Experts say that the German occupation of Greece was brutal. Germany requisitioned food from Greece even as Greeks went hungry. By the end of the war, about 300,000 had starved to death. Greece also had an active resistance movement, which prompted frequent and horrific reprisals like the one that occurred here in Amiras, a small village in Crete. Some historians believe that 1,500 villages were singled out for such reprisals.

Giannis Syngelakis among photographs of the local Nazi victims. His father was among those killed by German soldiers in 1943 as part of a reprisal for an attack on an outpost.

After the war, experts say, Greece got little in reparations. But few countries did. The Allies concentrated on rebuilding Germany, not wanting to once again impose crushing reparations bills as they did after World War I, an important factor, they believed, in bringing about World War II. Some German property was divvied up, but many claims were simply put off until East and West Germany might be reunited.

When that moment arrived, the world’s landscape had changed significantly. By then, the European Union was in place, Germany was contributing more to the bloc’s budget than it was getting back, and, some experts say, the books were closed. (Germany has paid huge reparations to Israel in the name of the Jewish people at large, and the German government, German companies and a number of other institutions established a multibillion-dollar fund to compensate those forced to perform labor during Nazi internment.)

Yet some groups in Greece have long felt that Germany still owes victims like Mr. Syngelakis. And others, now looking back, believe that Germany was let off the hook back then and should be more generous now in Greece’s hour of need.

A few individual cases have made their way through the Greek courts, including one representing the victims of a massacre in Distomo in 1944. Germans rampaged through the village gutting pregnant women, bayoneting babies and setting homes on fire, witnesses have said. Lawyers for Distomo won a judgment of $38 million in Greece. But the Greek government has never given permission to lay claim to German property in Greece as a way of collecting on the debt.

Christina Stamoulis, whose father was a lawyer on that case, said that many older people in Greece had only recently started talking about what happened in the war, in some cases because older Germans had arrived in their villages with their grandchildren wanting forgiveness.

“O.K., apologize,” Ms. Stamoulis said. “But we are expecting actions, too.”

Experts say that Germany is highly unlikely to want to revisit issues of reparations with Greece, since other countries would be likely to make similar claims. But some believe that Greece might have a shot at getting repayment on the bank loan.

“What is unusual about that loan is that there is a written agreement,” said Katerina Kralova, the author of “In the Shadow of Occupation: The Greek-German Relations During the Period 1940-2010.” “In other countries, the Germans just took the money.”

Asked about the 80-page report, officials of the Greek Foreign Ministry said that Greece had no intention of mingling war claims with the current financial situation. But, they said, its reparations claims are still valid. “The issue has been brought forward repeatedly, as per the international laws, both on a political and on a diplomatic level, on a bilateral basis, in a direct and utterly documented way, among partners, friends and allies,” said one official, who declined to be named as is common practice here.

For those who survived the Amiras massacre, a crushing poverty set in. Mr. Syngelakis said his mother sometimes scrounged for edible weeds to feed her children. He did not have shoes until he was a teenager.

“Back then, they destroyed us with guns,” Mr. Syngelakis said, the anger still clear. “Today, they do it financially.”

Olympic flame handed over to Russia for Sochi Winter Olympics

Source: TheAustralian

Olympic flame Sochi

Actress Ino Menegaki plays a high priestess as she lights a torch with the Olympic flame at the Panathenaic stadium in Athens during the ceremony handing over the flame for the the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, which begin on February 7. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

THE Olympic torch was formally handed over from Greece to organisers of the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games on Saturday, just weeks before it will be carried into space.

In sunny weather at the Panathenaic Stadium that hosted the first modern Olympics in 1896, the torch was presented to Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak by the president of the Hellenic Olympic Committee, Spyros Capralos.

Attending the handover ceremony was Greek President Karolos Papoulias.

“The Sochi Winter Olympics will not only become a part of Olympic history but will also make a sufficient contribution to the development of trust, friendship and respect of various cultures and countries,” Mr Kozak said addressing the spectators.

He thanked the Greek people “for maintaining the Olympic values” said it was “a great honour for me to represent Russia with pride and accept the flame.”

Mr Capralos said that the Olympic movement provides “a message of peace and solidarity among nations and that the Olympic flame is a symbol which unites all nations.”

“The Olympic flame is part of Greece and our heritage,” Mr Capralos added. “We are very proud of handing over the flame.”

Some 15,000 spectators attended the brief ceremony, which included a parade of Greek presidential guards dressed in traditional attire and a ritual dance by white-clad actresses dressed as ancient priestesses.

The Olympic flame was lit in Ancient Olympia last Sunday and embarked on a week-long journey through Greece ending at Panathenaic Stadium.

The torch was brought into the stadium by seven-times Greek figure skating champion Panagiotis Markouizos.

From Greece the flame will be flown on Sunday to Russia to be carried through all 83 Russian regions and visit 2900 towns and settlements before arriving in Sochi for the opening ceremony on February 7 ending a 65,000-kilometre journey.

About 14,000 torchbearers are expected to carry the torch.

The torch relay will make history when it is taken into space for the first time later this year.

It is due to travel to the International Space Station where it will then be taken on a spacewalk.

According to the Sochi organisers, the torch is due to arrive at the station on the Soyuz TMA-11M manned spaceship in November, and Russian cosmonauts Sergei Ryazansky and Oleg Kotov have been tasked with the historical assignment.

For safety reasons, the torch will not be lit during the spacewalk, the organisers said.

Following the mission, cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhim, who is currently based in the station, will deliver the special cargo safely back to earth.

The 62nd Annual Greek Festival in Portland (photos)

Source: oregonlive

Sunny weather brought out some big crowds to the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral on Saturday in Northeast Portland. The event, featuring authentic Greek food, dancing and music, continues on Sunday, Oct. 6, 2013, from noon to 8 p.m.

  

1 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Father Jordan Brown leads a tour and Q&A in the cathedral during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

 

2 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Religious artwork and stained glass adorns the cathedral at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral during the Greek Festival in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

3 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Vasiliki “Kiki” Farrier, a volunteer, helps arrange the candle station in the narthex of the church, during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

4 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Religious art featuring Jesus Christ almost seems to be giving approval to Vasiliki “Kiki” Farrier, a volunteer, as she helps arrange the candle station during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

5 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — The entrance to the cathedral soaks up the October sun during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

6 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Niko Andronikos (second from right) and Cindy Trumpower (far right) serve Greek salads during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

7 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Vasiliki Kordalis tosses the loukoumades, a fried-dough pastry soaked in a honey-sugar coating, during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

8 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Lamb roasts on a spit at the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

9 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Darin (left to right), Lilee, Zoee and Elizabeth Gering sample the Greek fare during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

10 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Mary Radtke helps a customer out with the huge array of Greek pastries, homemade by volunteers, during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

11 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Matt Lyons proudly shows off his newly purchased Greek fisherman hat with girlfriend, Alexandra Pandolfi, during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

12 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A big display of jewelry, including these necklaces, were for sale during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

13 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A couple of kids warm up the dance floor prior to a performance during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

14 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Karen Aase holds her eight-month-old granddaughter, Amelia Degheri, as they wait for the Greek folk dancing to start during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

15 of 25PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Thomas Spathas introduces Greek folk dance performers during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian 

16 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A Greek folk dance group of children, ages approximately nine to ten-years-old, performs. The group’s name is Arete, which means “excellence” or “reaching your potential.” The 62nd Annual Greek Festival was held at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

17 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A child with a Greek folk dance group adjusts her dress during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

18 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Authentic Greek costumes were used during the folk dancing at the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

19 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — Authentic Greek costumes were used during the folk dancing at the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

20 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A Greek folk dance group of children, ages approximately nine to ten-years-old, performs. The group’s name is Arete, which means “excellence” or “reaching your potential.” The 62nd Annual Greek Festival was held at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

21 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A Greek folk dance group of children, ages approximately nine to ten-years-old, performs. The group’s name is Arete, which means “excellence” or “reaching your potential.” The 62nd Annual Greek Festival was held at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian 

22 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A Greek folk dance group of children, ages approximately nine to ten-years-old, performs. The group’s name is Arete, which means “excellence” or “reaching your potential.” The 62nd Annual Greek Festival was held at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

23 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A young Greek folk dancer scoops up some dollar bills after a spectator (not pictured) threw some money on the dance floor during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

24 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — One young Greek folk dancer was a bit more quick to act than the others, after a spectator (not pictured) threw some money on the dance floor during the 62nd Annual Greek Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

25 of 25 PORTLAND, OREGON — October 5, 2013 — A Greek folk dance group of children, ages approximately nine to ten-years-old, performs. The group’s name is Arete, which means “excellence” or “reaching your potential.” The 62nd Annual Greek Festival was held at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Portland on Saturday. Drew Vattiat/The Oregonian

Golden Dawn leader Nikos Michaloliakos denies charges

Sourc: Ekathimerini

Michaloliakos says allegations against party politically motivated, decision on custody postponed

Golden Dawn leader Nikos Michaloliakos has told a magistrate that he is the victim of political prosecution, adding that he condemns all forms of violence.

During a marathon session at the Evelpidon court complex in Athens that went on until early Thursday, Michaloliakos denied charges that his Golden Dawn party, which has 18 lawmakers in the 300-strong House, is a criminal organization.

“I feel sorry for the murder of [Pavlos] Fyssas,” he said of the 34-year-old rapper that was stabbed to death by a Golden Dawn member last month. “I condemn [the murder], like I condemn violence in general. I am not a Nazi,” said the 56-year-old mathematician.

Michaloliakos said he had no knowledge if individual members of Golden Dawn had broken the law. The activity of the party, he said, has been within the contours of parliamentary politics.

A decision on whether to remand Michaloliakos in custody was postponed. Sources said it would be announced after a testimony by Giorgos Patelis, the head of the local chapter of Golden Dawn in Nikaia, southwest of Athens, close to the run-down district of Keratsini where Fyssas was stabbed. Patelis’s testimony was still ongoing at 3.20 a.m. Thursday.

Three senior Golden Dawn lawmakers were freed on Wednesday pending trial – a surprise decision that raised questions about the solidity of the state’s case against the ultranationalist party.

Party spokesman Ilias Kasidiaris and fellow lawmakers Ilias Panagiotaros and Nikos Michos stormed out of the court to cheers of “bravo” from supporters. They kicked and shoved journalists out of the way before hailing a taxi.

A fourth MP, Yiannis Lagos, was remanded in custody after a prosecutor and magistrate agreed that he was both a flight risk and likely to reoffend. It remained unclear why judicial officials believed that the same did not apply to Michos or to Kasidiaris, who faces a separate trial for assaulting two female MPs on live television last year.

Golden Dawn’s second-in-command according to prosecutors, Christos Pappas, is scheduled to appear before a magistrate at 10 a.m. on Thursday.

Meanwhile, late on Wednesday police announced the arrest of Golden Dawn candidate Themis Skordeli. Reports said police found 145,000 euros in her apartment.

Michaloliakos: Golden Dawn leader in sights of Greek justice

Source: Ekathimerini

Nikos Michaloliakos, the leader of Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn, is a disciple of a former Greek military dictator, who led his fringe group all the way to parliament.

Just over a year after it took Greek politics by storm to elect 18 MPs for the first time in its history, Golden Dawn has been labelled a “criminal organisation” by judicial authorities.

Michaloliakos, a 56-year-old mathematician, will appear in court Wednesday to be charged with belonging to a criminal organisation.

He has already been jailed on two occasions in the late 1970s for assaulting journalists and participating in bomb attacks in Athens.

While in prison, he befriended ex-dictator George Papadopoulos and was handpicked to lead the youths of far-right group EPEN after the fall of the Greek junta in 1974.

He then founded Golden Dawn, which he has run with an iron fist for the past three decades, making him one of the longest-serving party leaders in Greece.

The party follows a strict military-style regimen. Its members conduct parades dressed in black shirts and camouflage trousers, and are required to stand to attention before higher-ranking members.

Magistrates have linked the group to two homicides, three attempted homicides, robberies and an arson attack on a bank.

The evidence was drawn from prior police investigations, police wiretaps and the testimony of former members who have described how the group orchestrated attacks on migrants and Greek rivals.

According to the magistrates’ report, which was leaked to the media, Golden Dawn also held clandestine training in the use of assault weaponry for elite members.

Michaloliakos’ first elected post was as an Athens municipal councillor in 2010, where he attended sessions with bodyguards and was filmed taunting a left-wing opponent with fascist salutes.

At the time of its inception and for years thereafter, Golden Dawn glorified Adolf Hitler and the warrior ethos of Nazi Germany in its party publications.

One of the party’s older texts, read in parliament by a leftist MP in May, called Hitler a “visionary of new Europe”.

“Faith in the words of the Fuehrer, and faith in victory, grows in our hearts. The fight goes on, the future is ours,” the Golden Dawn text read.

This rhetoric was later toned down as the party adjusted its message to better suit Greek voter concerns with austerity and illegal immigration.

Even so, in a May 2012 interview Michaloliakos effectively denied the Holocaust, telling Greece’s Mega channel: “There were no crematoria, it’s a lie. Or gas chambers.”

Formerly on the fringe of Greek politics, Golden Dawn went from 19,000 votes a few years ago to over 426,000 in June 2012 after pledging to “scour the country” clean of illegal immigrants.

Michaloliakos later said the party’s voters were “the equivalent of 30-40 army divisions.”

The party has further boosted its ratings over the past year by organising food handouts for impoverished Greeks, and until recently polled more than 10 percent of the vote, making it the third most popular party in the country.

Now denying any neo-Nazi affiliation, Golden Dawn has mercilessly attacked mainstream parties as “traitors” and “thieves”, tapping into widespread anger towards the conservative and socialist governments that brought Greece to the brink of bankruptcy in 2010.

Ολοκληρώθηκε η απολογία Μιχαλολιάκου

Έξι ώρες διήρκεσε η απολογία του γενικού γραμματέα της Χρυσής Αυγής, Νίκου Μιχαλολιάκου. Ο κ. Μιχαλολιάκος οδηγήθηκε στην Ευελπίδων λίγο μετά τις 19:30, ενώ η απολογία του ολοκληρώθηκε λίγα λεπτά πριν το ρολόι δείξει 2 τα ξημερώματα. Μαζί με τον κ. Μιχαλολιάκο μεταφέρθηκαν στην Ευελπίδων άλλοι πέντε από τους συλληφθέντες, ανάμεσά τους και ο «πυρηνάρχης» της Χρυσής Αυγής στη Νίκαια, Γιώργος Πατέλης, ο οποίος απολογείται αυτή την ώρα και όπως όλα δείχνουν, η απόφαση θα εξαρτηθεί από τον ίδιο.

Η απόφαση ανακριτών και εισαγγελέων θα ανακοινωθεί μετά την απολογία του Γ. Πατέλη προκειμένου να διασταυρωθούν κάποια στοιχεία που αφορούν στους κατόχους των κινητών τηλεφώνων για την νύχτα της δολοφονίας του Π. Φύσσα.

Σύμφωνα με πληροφορίες του Lay-out, ο κ. Μιχαλολιάκος φέρεται να υποστήριξε ότι η δίωξή του είναι καθαρά πολιτική και ότι λυπάται για τη δολοφονία του Παύλου Φύσσα. Ακόμα, υποστήριξε πως δεν είναι ναζιστής, ενώ καταδίκασε τη βία.

Έξω από τα δικαστήρια βρίσκονταν περίπου 200 οπαδοί της Χρυσής Αυγής, φωνάζοντας το:«Αίμα, τιμή, Χρυσή Αυγή».

Οι ακραίοι της Χρυσής Αυγής είναι υπόλογοι και υπόδικοι”

Πέντε ώρες διήρκησε η απολογία Μιχαλολιάκου Απολογείται ο Γ. Πατέλης Πιθανόν μετά να ζητηθούν διευκρινήσεις από τον γ.γ. της Χρυσής Αυγής.

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«Οι ακραίοι της Χρυσής Αυγής είναι υπόλογοι και υπόδικοι, κάποιοι είναι ήδη προφυλακισμένοι, κάτι τέτοιο δεν είχε γίνει ποτέ ως τώρα» δήλωσε ο πρωθυπουργός Αντώνης Σαμαράς από την Ουάσινγκτον όπου είχε σήμερα συνάντηση με τον αντιπρόεδρο των ΗΠΑ Τζο Μπάιντεν.

Συνεχίζοντας ανέφερε: «Η εικόνα της χώρας δεν έχει καμία σχέση με εκείνη πριν από δύο εβδομάδες. Είμαστε Δημοκρατία και η Δημοκρατία λειτουργεί. Η Δικαιοσύνη κάνει τη δουλειά της. Όσοι υπονομεύουν τη Δημοκρατία αντιμετωπίζουν τις συνέπειες. Όσοι παραβιάζουν το νόμο αντιμετωπίζουν τη δικαιοσύνη. Όλα γίνονται με βάση το νόμο. Η δικαιοσύνη έχει την πρωτοβουλία. Αυτό σημαίνει δημοκρατική νομιμότητα».

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Συνεχίζεται μέχρι από αυτή την ώρα η μαραθώνια απολογία του γενικού γραμματέα της Χρυσής Αυγής, Νίκου Μιχαλολιάκου ενώπιον δύο ανακριτών, των κ.κ. Γεωργουλέα και Παπακώστα και δύο εισαγγελέων.

ο κ. Μιχαλολιάκος, στην απολογία του, η οποία ξεκίνησε στις 19:30, αναμένεται να κινηθεί στην ίδια γραμμή που κινήθηκαν και οι βουλευτές της Χρυσής Αυγής και να υποστηρίξει ότι η δίωξή του είναι πολιτική.

Επίσης, ο Ν. Μιχαλολιάκος αναμένεται να πει ότι αποκηρύσσει τη βία και ότι η μόνη δράση της Χρυσής Αυγής είναι κοινοβουλευτική.

Όλγα Σαραντοπούλου: Δεν νοείται κενό «λειτουργίας ή ύπαρξης» του ΣΑΕ

Στην «ανωμαλία» που συνιστά η  παρατεινόμενη εκκρεμότητα ψήφισης του νέου Νόμου που θα διέπει την ανασύσταση και λειτουργία του Συμβουλίου Απόδημου Εληνισμού (ΣΑΕ) αναφέρθηκε  η παγκόσμια Γραμματέας ΣΑΕ  Δρ. Όλγα Σαραντοπούλου, σε χαιρετισμό της στο 9ο Τακτικό Συνέδριο της Ομοσπονδίας Ελληνικών Κοινοτήτων και Αδελφόττων Ιταλίας – CINISELLO BALSAMO την Κυριακή, 29.09.2013. Η παράταση δε του “κενού” ύπαρξης νομοθετικού πλαισίου για το ΣΑΕ, που οδήγησε στον παροπλισμό του προεδρείου, εκτός από την καταλυτική αδράνεια στην οποία έχει καταβυθίσει το θεσμό,  οδηγεί και σε φαινόμενα ακραίου “ετσιθελισμού” σε βάρος του, όπως πρόσφατα εκδηλώθηκαν από το Δήμαρχο Θεσσαλονίκης κ. Γιάννη Μπουτάρη που εκδίωξε το ΣΑΕ από τα γραφεία του στην “πρωτεύουσα του ελληνισμού”, αφήνοντάς το Συμβούλιο Απόδημου Ελληνισμού ουσιαστικά ΑΣΤΕΓΟ…

Ειδικότερα, αναφερόμενη στο ΣΑΕ, η κυρία Σαραντοπούλου ευθαρσώς αναγνώρισε ότι «τα τελευταία χρόνια δεν κατάφεραμε όσο θα θέλαμε να αγκαλιάσουμε τον Ελληνισμό του Εξωτερικού, σ’  αυτό φταίνε διάφοροι παράγοντες. Και η Ελληνική πολιτεία φέρει τις δικές της ευθύνες, αλλά και το προεδρείο ΣΑΕ, γιατί πρέπει να παραδεχτούμε ότι δεν είχαμε όλοι τα ίδια όνειρα και οράματα για τον παγκόσμιο Ελληνισμό».

Ακολούθως η Γραμματέας του ΣΑΕ, αναφερόμενη στην σημερινή “στασιμότητα” που χαρακτηρίζει το ΣΑΕ, τόνισε ότι το Συμβούλιο Απόδημου Ελληνισμού, ως  θεσμικό όργανο κατοχυρωμένο στο Σύνταγμα της Ελλάδος, «δεν δύναται να παρουσιάζει κενό λειτουργίας η ύπαρξης».

Σχολιάζοντας , μάλιστα, τη στάση ορισμένων μελών του προεδρείου, που έσπευσαν να παραιτηθούν, είπε ότι μπορεί μεν η θητεία του προεδρείου να έχει  λήξει με 31.12.2012, «…αυτό, όμως,  υπό την προϋπόθεση οτι θα είχε πραγματοποιηθεί αρχές Δεκεμβρίου 2012 η Τακτική Συνέλευση και θα είχε εκλεγεί  νέο προεδρείο».

Καθώς αυτό δεν έγινε, η άποψή της κυρίας Σαραντοπούλου είναι πως τα μέλη του Προεδρείου του ΣΑΕ «ως εκλεγμένοι απο τον οργανωμένο απόδημο Ελληνισμό, οφείλουμε να παραμείνουμε στην θέση μας μέχρι να εκλεγεί νέο προεδρείο και να αποδώσουμε απολογισμό στην Ομογένεια που μας εξέλεξε».

Υπενθυμίζεται ότι ο κυβερνητικός ανασχηματισμός του περασμένου Ιουνίου προκάλεσε την ανακοπή των εργασιών της Αναθεωρητικής και Οργανωτικής Επιτροπής που είχε συσταθεί από τον προηγούμενο Υφυπουργό Εξωτερικών κ. Κων. Τσιάρα, με συνέπεια να ατονήσει και το Νομοσχέδιο που, επίσης, ο π. ΥΦΥΠΕ είχε καταρτίσει και  αναρτήσει σε δημόσια διαβούλευση στην «Διαύγεια».

Να σημειωθεί ότι  τόσο ο νέος  Υφυπουργός  Εξωτερικών, αρμόδιος για τον Απόδημο Ελληνισμό κ . Κυριάκος Γεροντόπουλος, που διαδέχθηκε τον κ. Τσιάρα, όσο και η Επιτροπή για την επεξεργασία του νόμου και την μελλοντική λειτουργία του ΣΑΕ τελούν εν αναμονή διορισμού, από την νέα Τακτική Περίοδο της Βουλής, τη σύσταση νέας διαρκούς “Επιτροπής για την ελληνική Διασπορά”, ο Πρόεδρος της οποίας θεσμικά θα αναδειχθεί και σε πρόεδρο της “Οργανωτικής-Αναθεωρητικής Επιτροπής”, καθώς ο π. πρόεδρος κ. Άδωνις Γεωργιάδης ανέλαβε υπουργικό θώκο.

Καταλήγοντας στο χαιρετισμό της η κυρία Σαραντοπούλου, ζήτησε από τους απανταχού Έλληνες «να ενώσουμε τις δυνάμεις μας ώστε να μετατρέψουμε την αγάπη για τη χώρα μας σε μια δημιουργική στρατηγική με ρεαλιστικούς στόχους για την διασφάλιση της συνέχειας του Ελληνισμού εντός και εκτός των συνόρων,για να διατηρήσουμε τις διαχρονικές αξίες μας που ενώνουν μέσα από τον Πολιτισμό τους λαούς».

Και κατέληξε: « Ο Ελληνισμός της Ιταλίας ειναι ενα φωτεινό παράδειγμα. Η Ομοσπονδία Ελληνικών Κοινοτήτων και Αδελφοτήτων Ιταλίας εχει να επιδείξει αξιόλογο έργο και μαζί με τους φιλέλληνες Ιταλούς εχουν κατορθώσει να γνωρίσουν στο ευρύ κοινό τον πλούτο και την ιστορική διαδρομή που έχει διανύσει κάθε έκφραση πολιτισμού στην χώρα μας».