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Dr Nick Lygeros to give lecture on Greek language in Sydney

Dr Nick Lygeros has arrived in Sydney, NSW and is set to give a lecture on ‘The significance of the Greek language in today’s society and as a second language‘ on Sunday, March 5.

The lecture event has been organised by the Pan-Macedonian Association of NSW and will be held at the Camelot Lounge in the Sydney suburb of Marrickville from 1pm.

Coffee, tea and light refreshments will be provided during the event. For more information, you can call the President of the Pan-Macedonian Association of NSW, Anastasia Karakominakis.

Who is Dr Nick Lygeros?

Dr Lygeros is an advisor and professor of strategy, geostrategy, topostrategy and chronostrategy and teaches at the Police Academy of Greece, at the School of Security of Greece, at the Interdisciplinary School of War, at the School of Army Recruitment, at the Hellenic Air Force Academy, at the Hellenic National Defence College, at the Department of Professional Continual Education of staff and senior management, and the Center of Diplomatic and Strategic Studies (CEDS).

He has been advisor at the National School of Defense, at the School of Security of Greece and in Science for the Foreign Affairs Department of the Greek government. He has also served as a strategy advisor for the Greek and Cypriot government.

As a Professor in mathematics, computer science cybernetics, epistemology, linguistics, bioethics, strategy and teacher education, he has also taught strategic management at the Universities of Lyon, at the Polytechnic School of Xanthi, at the National Kapodistrian University of Athens, in the Teacher’s Education Department of Democritus University in Thrace, the Technological Educational Institute of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace in the Engineering Department of Oil and Gas Technology, and in the University of Nicosia in Cyprus.

He has been special emissary in the United Nations for the Western Sahara Conflict. He is known for his exceptional intellectual giftedness having an IQ level of 189 on the scale of Stanford–Binet.

Oakleigh Grammar to celebrate 40th anniversary with Gala Ball in Melbourne

2023 marks the 60th anniversary of the Greek Orthodox Community of Oakleigh & District and the 40th anniversary of Oakleigh Grammar. A Gala Ball to celebrate the milestones sold out in record time of under 30 minutes.

Several events have been planned throughout the year with the Gala Ball being the keystone event proudly sponsored by the Bank of Sydney.

In a statement to the School community, School Board Chairman, Chris Damatopoulos, said: “The Oakleigh Grammar Board of Management, together with Principal Mark Robertson, are delighted to announce that the Bank of Sydney has kindly joined us as the major sponsor of our 2023 Gala Ball.”

Oakleigh Grammar Community.

“Our community and school are grateful and humbled by the generosity of Miltos Michaelas and Sam Pletsias from the Bank of Sydney, for their support in helping us mark the 60th anniversary of our community and 40th anniversary of our treasured Oakleigh Grammar,” Mr Damatopoulos added.

“We eagerly look forward with excitement to a great celebratory night in honour of a grand community and Oakleigh Grammar on 27 May 2023. With an unprecedented sell-out, we thank our Parents Association, and the entire Oakleigh community for your support.

“We welcome potential sponsors and community to support the many future community and school events scheduled for our milestone year in 2023.”

World leaders express grief after Greece’s deadliest train crash

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World leaders have expressed their grief after Greece’s deadliest train crash, which killed at least 43 people and left many more injured.

Among the first to express their condolences to Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, and President Katerina Sakellaropoulou was Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

A statement by the social media account of the Turkish presidency said: “In his message, President Erdogan stated that he is deeply saddened by the accident, and conveyed his condolences for those who lost their life in the accident and wished a speedy recovery to those injured.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz released a statement sharing his grief in the aftermath of the deadly collision in central Greece.

“The news of the train crash in Greece is terrible! We mourn with our Greek friends, and our thoughts are with the victims and their loved ones. We wish you great strength at this difficult time,” said the chancellor in a statement.

The President of the People’s Republic of China, Xi Jinping, also expressed his condolences in a message to Sakellaropoulou on Wednesday.

The Chinese state leader expressed his sincere condolences for the victims of the train disaster, sympathy to the bereaved families and wishes for a speedy recovery to the injured.

These statement come as Greece’s Opposition leaders, Alexis Tsipras and Nikos Androulakis, also expressed their “deep shock” at the deadly train collision.

“What happened is unthinkable. Our thoughts [are with] the people who are died so unjustly,” SYRIZA leader Mr Tsipras said.

“This is an unspeakable tragedy. My thoughts are with the families of the victims and the injured,” PASOK-KINAL leader Mr Androulakis said in his own statement.

Yarra Council approves mental health hospital despite objections from Alphington Grammar

A 32-bed mental health hospital will be developed in Melbourne’s inner north-west after it received approval by the Yarra City Council on Tuesday night, according to The Sydney Morning Herald.

The facility will be developed just off Heidelberg Road in Alphington, despite objections from families, staff and students from nearby Alphington Grammar School.

The hospital will be run by Healthe Care and would cater to patients with mild mental health disorders such as depression and anxiety, and would exclude those with a primary diagnosis of substance abuse.

The Council approved the mental health hospital during a planning decisions committee meeting on Tuesday night, with Councillor Anab Mohamud acknowledging the development was a complex issue, but said there was high demand for mental health support.

According to The SMH, the council was flooded with almost 200 objections to the proposal, many submitted by the families of children enrolled at Alphington Grammar.

The proposed site of the mental hospital near Alphington Grammar School. Photo: SMH.

Alphington Grammar School principal Vivianne Nikou spoke at Tuesday night’s meeting and said the facility had proposed inadequate reporting mechanisms if safety issues cropped up.

“Students in primary school particularly are at a highly impressionable age, and interactions with strangers can be very detrimental to their own psychological development,” Ms Nikou said, while proposing the land behind the facility be taken off the roads register and sold to the land owners of the school.

Councillor Bridgid O’Brien, who was also on the committee, added an amendment to the successful proposal for a 1.8-metre-high fence to be erected at the mental health hospital near the grammar school.

She said there will be further ongoing work around the risk assessment issues, done by the appropriate medical authorities.

The Latest: Death toll rises in Greece’s deadliest train crash as search for missing continues

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Rescuers continued to search for the missing on Wednesday in the wreckage of two trains that slammed into each other in central Greece, killing at least 43 people and leaving many more injured. It is Greece’s deadliest rail crash on record.

By midmorning on Wednesday, 35 bodies had been taken to the general hospital in Larissa, the nearest town, some burned beyond recognition, forcing relatives to give DNA samples.

The two trains — a passenger train carrying 342 people and travelling from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki, and a cargo train from Thessaloniki to Larissa — collided head-on outside the city of Larissa in central Greece late on Tuesday.

Scene of the crash. Photo copyright: The Greek Herald.
Photo copyright: The Greek Herald.

The passenger train inexplicably switched lanes and diverged to the freight track. The two trains then travelled for several kilometres along the same track before colliding at high speed.

Witnesses who rushed to the scene described the front two carriages of the passenger train, where most of the student victims were seated, as being completely destroyed.

On impact the wagons exploded into flames, sending huge sheets of steel into the air. Survivors later spoke of being ejected from carriage windows; others described how they had to struggle through plumes of acrid smoke to free themselves after the train buckled. 

Photo copyright: The Greek Herald.

Stationmaster arrested, Transport Minister resigns:

Greek police have arrested a local stationmaster who was in charge of signalling over the deadly train crash, a police official has confirmed.

The arrested stationmaster, described as being in his late 50s with more than four decades of experience on the railways, was charged with involuntary manslaughter and unintentionally causing mass grievous bodily harm.

Photo copyright: The Greek Herald.

A police investigation was also launched into the cause of the crash. A public prosecutor, Stamatis Daskopolopoulos, tasked with overseeing the inquiry, said witnesses had begun giving testimony.

Later, Greece’s Transport and Infrastructure Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis announced his resignation after visiting the site of the crash.

Greece’s Transport and Infrastructure Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis (centre) announced his resignation after visiting the site of the crash with Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis (second from right).

“When something so tragic happens, it is impossible to continue and pretend like it didn’t happen,” the politician told reporters.

Stepping down was not only “a mark of respect toward the memory of the people who died so unfairly,” but, he added, an assumption of responsibility “for the Greek state’s and Greek political system’s mistakes over the course of history.”

Greece goes from Carnival to mourning:

Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, rushed to the scene at Tempi and called a three-day period of official mourning, ordering flags to fly at half mast.

Mitsotakis called the collision of the passenger train and a freight train “a horrific rail accident without precedent in our country,” and pledged a full, independent investigation.

He said it appears the crash was “mainly due to a tragic human error.”

Greece’s President, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, also cut short her official visit to Moldova on Wednesday and returned to Greece, rushing to the site of the train accident in Tempi.

Katerina Sakellaropoulou laying flowers at the crash site. Photo: AMNA.gr.

“We find ourselves in front of an unimaginable tragedy,” Sakellaropoulou said in a statement. “We are mainly mourning young people.”

Shaken by the sight of the crash, Sakellaropoulou left a few flowers at the wreckage in the victims’ memory. Immediately afterwards, she visited the two Larissa hospitals where the crash victims, many of the injured and their relatives were taken. 

Welcome event held for Consul General of Greece in Sydney and new Greek Trade Commissioner

A welcome reception was held for the new Trade Commissioner of Greece in Australia, Chrysa Prokopaki, and the Consul General of Greece in Sydney, Ioannis Mallikourtis, at the View by Sydney in Walsh Bay on Tuesday night.

The event, organised by Business Sydney, was attended by over 100 invited political, business, community and faith leaders including Archbishop Makarios of Australia; the NSW Minister for Transport, Veterans and Western Sydney, David Elliott MP; Member for Canterbury, Sophie Cotsis MP; the President of the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW), Harry Danalis; and the Executive Director of Business Sydney, Paul Nicolaou; among many others.

The Consul General and Trade Commissioner with Harry Michaels. All photos: The Greek Herald.
The Publisher of The Greek Herald, Dimitra Skalkos (second from left), attended the event.
Harry Danalis and Nia Karteris.
The Greek Trade Commissioner with guests.
Official guests at the event.

After guests mingled and networked amongst themselves, Mr Nicolaou kicked off official proceedings as emcee and welcomed a number of people to the podium to speak. This included Archbishop Makarios, Minister Elliott, the Consul General Mr Mallikourtis, the Trade Commissioner Ms Prokopaki, and Mr Danalis.

Paul Nicolaou.
David Elliott.
Archbishop Makarios.

In their speeches, both the Consul General and Trade Commissioner thanked everyone for their welcome to Australia.

Consul General of Greece in Sydney, Ioannis Mallikourtis.
Trade Commissioner of Greece in Australia, Chrysa Prokopaki.

From there, a Question & Answer segment was held between Mr Mallikourtis and Ms Prokopaki with The Greek Herald‘s Digital Editor, Andriana Simos, as moderator.

The Greek Herald Digital Editor, Andriana Simos (centre) conducting the Q&A.

Miss Simos asked the diplomats a series of questions around bilateral trade relations between Greece and Australia, the Double Taxation Agreement, the opening of an office of the Greek National Tourism Organisation in Melbourne, the Greek diaspora vote, and the digitisation of consular services in Sydney.

The Trade Commissioner with the Consulate’s Press Counsellor, Anastasia.
Barbara Zantiotis and Christina Efthymiades.
Guests with the Consul General.

During the Q&A, Mr Mallikourtis made a number of announcements around the digitisation of the Consulate in Sydney. This included: (1) credit and debit card payments would be accepted at the Consulate in Sydney for the first time; and (2) the introduction of a system of electronic appointments.

At the conclusion of the Q&A, Mr Nicolaou invited guests to continue their networking and take photos with the Consul General and Trade Commissioner.

More guests.
The Sydney Harbour Bridge was a backdrop for the welcome reception.
More guests at the welcome reception.

Trains collide in central Greece, many dead and injured

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Two trains have collided in central Greece and rescue teams are evacuating passengers after at least two carriages caught fire.

The fire brigade has officially announced that 32 people have died and 85 are injured, ERT reports. At least 150 firefighters with 40 firetrucks are at the scene.

The two trains — a passenger train travelling from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki, and a cargo train from Thessaloniki to Larissa, collided head-on outside the city of Larissa in central Greece late on Tuesday.

Train derailment in Greece. Photo: Leonidas Zekas / Eurokinissi.

Konstantinos Agorastos, the governor of the broader Thessaly region, told SKAI TV “the collision was very strong,” adding that the first four carriages derailed, with the first two “almost completely destroyed.”

Mr Agorastos said about 250 passengers were evacuated safely to Thessaloniki on buses.

SKAI TVB showed footage of derailed carriages, badly damaged with broken windows and thick plumes of smoke, as well as debris strewn across the road.

Rescue workers carrying torches were seen looking for trapped passengers in carriages.

More to come.

Rebekah Elmaloglou set to return to rebooted TV show Neighbours

Rebekah Elmaloglou has been named among the cast members set to return to TV soap Neighbours this year, The Daily Telegraph has reported.

The show was shelved by Channel 10 in 2022 after 37 years, but will return to screens in 2023 after securing Amazon Freevee and Prime Video as international broadcast partners.

Elmaloglou will return as Terese Willis, along with other cast members such as Annie Jones, Tim Kano and Georgie Stone.

Of her return, Elmaloglou said: “Honestly, I’m just as much in the dark as our fans and equally as excited, and a little nervous to see what the writers have planned for Terese.”

“No doubt Paul (Stefan Dennis) will be lurking in the background,” she added.

Already announced to return to fictional Erinsborough were Alan Fletcher, Jackie Woodburne, Ryan Moloney and Stefan Dennis.

Source: The Daily Telegraph

Irene Hatzipetros re-appointed Chair of Football St George

Irene Hatzipetros has been re-appointed as Chair and Executive Director of the St George Football Association (FSG). Hatzipetros was unanimously endorsed at a FSG Board meeting on February 27.

Hatzipetros was first appointed to the role in 2020 and is the first female Chair of FSG.

Irene Hatzipetros (centre) with female footballers.

In an interview with The Greek Herald in September last year, Hatzipetros spoke openly about her life and career. She also spoke about the future of females in football.

“We want to continue to promote football in our community. Continue to engage in conversations and also support the pathways for players to continue in the sport with passion,” she said.

NSW ex-minister Milton Orkopoulos pleads not guilty to child sex offences

Former NSW minister, Milton Orkopoulos, has pleaded not guilty to drug supply and child sexual abuse offences, Nine News has reported.

Orkopoulos is accused of supplying prohibited drugs and committing a number of sexual offences against multiple boys, mainly around the Lake Macquarie area in NSW.

The offences allegedly occurred between 1993 and 2003.

The 65-year-old was arraigned in the NSW District Court on Tuesday and during the proceedings, he said “not guilty” 28 times.

A jury is expected to be empanelled for a trial today The trial is expected to last up to four weeks with a jury of 15 people.

Source: 9news.com