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‘An unbelievable sight’: At least 23 dead as two refugee boats sink off Greek coast

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Search and rescue operations are underway in the west and east of Greece, off the islands of Lesvos and Kythera, after refugees desperate to reach Europe were involved in two separate disasters just hours apart.

Off the coast of Lesvos, an over-loaded boat believed to have been carrying 40 passengers capsized on Thursday. According to official reports, the Greek Coast Guard has so far rescued 10 people and recovered 18 bodies: 16 young African women, a man and a boy.

Rescued migrants receive hospital treatment on the Greek island of Lesvos following the deadly sinking of a dinghy carrying migrants, on Thursday, October 10, 2022. AP Photo/Panagiotis Balaskas.

Based on preliminary investigations, it has been said the dinghy had set sail from the Turkish coast.

At least five people are believed to have died in a separate incident off the island of Kythera a few hours later.

The vessel, ultimately bound for Italy, is believed to have been carrying about 95 refugees tightly crammed before it was overcome by gale-force winds, struck rocks and sank. 80 people have been rescued, of whom at least 13 were taken to Kythera’s hospital.

Migrants, most of them from Afghanistan, gather at an old school used as a temporary shelter on the island of Kythera, southern Greece, Thursday, October 6, 2022. AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis.

“These are both very difficult operations … due to the strong winds which have been raging relentlessly on both sides of the coasts since last night,” Greek coastguard spokesperson, Nikos Kokkalas, said.

Speaking with the national broadcaster, ERT, he said the survivors from the Lesbos wreck are believed to be from African countries, whilst those from the Kythera wreck are believed to be from Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.

He added that the Kythera boat had been “completely destroyed” in winds of up to 101km/h and that passengers screamed for help as the boat sank.

Speaking with AP News, Afghan survivor, Abdul Ghafar Amur said: “The waves was too much high, about 6 metres.”

“We tried to save our lives, but most of our friends, they have died,” he said.

The survivors managed to cling to the rocks and nearby locals poured out to help pull them to safety with ropes.

“All the residents here went down to the harbour to try and help,” island resident Martha Stathaki told The Associated Press.

“We could see the boat smashing against the rocks and people climbing up those rocks to try and save themselves. It was an unbelievable sight.”

Amur said he paid smugglers $9,000 to be transported from Turkey to Italy, which matched accounts by other survivors.

Authorities and local residents save a migrant during a large-scale rescue operation on the island of Kythera, early Thursday, October 6, 2022. Photo: Ippolytos Prekas/kythera.news

Kythera is 400 kilometres west of Turkey and on a route often used by smugglers to bypass Greece and head directly to Italy.

Athens has since blamed both tragedies on Ankara’s unwillingness to implement the agreements it has signed with the European Union to prevent migrant boats from reaching European shores.

“As long as Turkey does not apply the laws, as long as it backs traffickers, as long as it does not honour the agreements it has signed, we will unfortunately also be faced with such tragedies,” government spokesperson Giannis Oikonomou told journalists at a regular briefing on Thursday. 

Early this morning, Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis tweeted: “I want to express my sadness at the tragic loss of human life in 2 separate shipwrecks in the Aegean, despite the heroic efforts of the Greek Coast Guard.”

“It is time to really work together, in a more meaningful way, to avoid such incidents from happening again.

“But also to completely neutralize traffickers who take advantage of innocent people, desperate people, who are trying to reach the European continent in boats that are clearly not seaworthy,” he added.


Magnetic Fields: Greece’s entry for the Oscars to screen at Sydney’s Greek Film Festival

Greece’s official entry in the Best International Feature Film category at the 2023 Oscars, Magnetic Fields, will be screening at this year’s Greek Film Festival in Sydney.

The 2022 Greek Film Festival, which is being presented by the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW) and the Greek Festival of Sydney, will be held at Leichardt’s Palace Norton Street Cinema from October 13 – 23.

People who watch Magnetic Fields are in for a ride as film director, Yorgos Goussis, and cast members, Elena Topalidou and Antonis Tsiotsiopoulos, take them on a 78 minute cinematic journey.

Film director, Yorgos Goussis.

The film tells the story of Elena, a young woman who decides to change course on a whim and finds herself on a ferry to an island. Antonis is on that same ferry, on his way to the island cemetery where he hopes to bury a metallic box.

When his car breaks down, Elena offers him a ride to a hotel and then again, the next day to the cemetery, where they are told the box can’t be left there for bureaucratic reasons.

Having enjoyed each other’s company and random banter, they decide to keep wandering around the island in search of a good place to bury the mysterious box.

The film was a Greek limited–release box office hit and won more than 10 awards at the Thessaloniki International film Festival and the Hellenic Film Academy’s Iris awards.

Reviews of the film have described it as a “crafty scientific experiment” or one that “speaks directly to the viewer.”

Magnetic Fields will be among twelve narrative features and three documentaries to feature at the Sydney Greek Film Festival this year, including The Greek Bar Jacket and Echoes of the Past.

The Greek Film Festival, presented by the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW and the Greek Festival of Sydney, runs from Thursday, October 13 to Sunday, October 23. Screenings will be at Palace Norton Street, 99 Norton Street, Leichhardt, NSW, 2040.

For more details visit: www.greekfilmfestival.com.au.

Kythera and Aphrodite: Greece’s symbolic jersey for the Rugby League World Cup

The Greek team’s jersey for its first-ever 2021 Rugby League World Cup match on October 17 against France in England has it all.

The jersey has been sponsored by the Chairman of the Sydney Roosters, Nick Politis, and is inspired by his Greek heritage with the name of his birthplace, the Greek island of Kythera, featuring prominently on the front.

On the back, is the name of the ancient Greek goddess of love and beauty, Aphrodite. According to Hesiod, the sea of Kythera is the birthplace of Aphrodite.

In fact, the Kytherian connection and symbolism is so strong in this jersey that the Kytherian Association of Australia (KAA) is now holding a silent auction for your chance to get your hands on one of them.

The KAA is auctioning off eight of the jerseys in Medium, Large and Extra-Large sizes via the MyMiniAuction platform.

Bidding for the jerseys will commence on Tuesday, October 11 at 9am and will close on Friday, October 14 at 6pm and can be placed via the website: https://www.myminiauction.com/kaa-auctions. A minimum bid is $200.

Greek team player, Peter Mamouzelos, models the jersey.

President of the KAA, Barbara Zantiotis, thanked the jersey donor for their generosity and encouraged everyone to place a bid.

“This jersey is unique, bearing the name of our beautiful island for the world to see. Who wouldn’t want to own a piece of history?” Barbara told The Greek Herald.

For more details, you can contact Barbara on 0412 060 657.

READ MORE: First-ever Greece squad announced for the Rugby League World Cup.

Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia suspends Father Eleftherios Tatsis

The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia has placed Father Eleftherios Tatsis (Papa Lefteris) on suspension, according to a statement released today.

In the statement, the Archdiocese confirmed Papa Lefteris has been “dismissed from his duties” on October 5 and “from this point forth, every service and every sacrament that possibly may be performed by the said clergyman does not have validity” and is not recognised by the Archdiocese.

This statement comes as Fr Eleftherios (Papa Lefteris), who was the parish priest at the Holy Monastery of Panagia Kamariani in Red Hill, Victoria, announced his resignation from the Archdiocese on Sunday, October 2.

Papa Lefteris. Photo: Andrew Batsch.

“It is my last night here. From tomorrow a new priest arrives and I hope he is… able to work with the youth here, who I love and continue to live for,” Papa Lefteris said at the time.

Fr Eleftherios resigned after the Archdiocese issued a statement last month expressing its disapproval of the priest for his “belligerent rhetoric” towards the church and Archbishop Makarios.

On Tuesday night, the Victorian Bishops and Clergy of the Archdiocese also issued an announcement regarding the priest and expressed their continued support of Archbishop Makarios.

READ MORE: Red Hill priest resigns from Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia.

Restaurateur Chris Lucas sells $6 million apartment in Sydney

Melbourne-based restaurateur, Chris Lucas, has sold his Potts Points apartment in Sydney, realestate.com.au has reported.

With views to the Harbour Bridge, Opera House and Garden Island dry dock, the apartment sold pre-auction at an undisclosed price through Raine & Horne Unlimited.

According to news.com.au, Lucas was seeking $6 million for the two-bedroom apartment. He bought it in 2017 for $3.4 million.

Lucas is the well-known face behind the Chin Chin chain and is the son of a Greek migrant.

READ MORE: Chris Lucas launches Grill Americano in Melbourne’s CBD.

Source: realestate.com.au.

UK’s Foreign Office says the sovereignty of Aegean islands is not in question

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The United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office said on Wednesday that it “does not consider the sovereignty of Aegean islands to be in question.”

According to Greece’s state-run news agency AMNA, a spokesperson for the British foreign affairs ministry made the comment in response to a Greek reporter’s question about Turkey’s recent provocative statements about the Aegean Islands.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently warned Greece it would pay a “heavy price” if it continues to harass Turkish fighter jets over the Aegean and hinted at military action.

Speaking at an aerial technology festival in Samsun last month, Erdogan accused Greece of “occupying” islands in the Aegean Sea that have a demilitarised status.

Erdogan has made provocative statements recently.

“You occupying the islands doesn’t bind us,” Erdogan said. “When the time comes, we’ll do what’s necessary. As we say, we may come down suddenly one night.”

“Look at history, if you go further, the price will be heavy.”

At the time, Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis condemned the remarks but said he can’t imagine tensions with Turkey could ever escalate into armed conflict.

“I don’t believe [armed conflict] will ever happen. And if, God forbid, it happened, Turkey would receive an absolutely devastating response,” Mitsotakis said.

These ongoing tensions come at a low point in relations between the two NATO allies, who are separated by centuries-long enmity and contemporary disputes, including Aegean Sea boundaries and immigration.

Greece releases video of Turkish coast guard violently pushing refugees

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Greece’s Migration Minister, Notis Mitarakis, released a video on Wednesday that allegedly shows Turkey’s Coast Guard violently pushing a boat full of refugees toward the Aegean islands.

Mitarakis posted the video on his Twitter account and said it shows the officers “violently pushing forward migrants to Greece, in violation of international law and the EU joint statement.”

The Migration Minister claimed the video was shot by a refugee who was eventually rescued by the Greek Coast Guard.

“It is further proof of the instrumentalisation of migration flows by Turkey,” he said.

Mitarakis did not say where or when the incident occurred, but the video shows a refugee boat next to the Turkish vessel and refugees pleading with the officers to help them.

The officers shout at them and use sticks to push them away.

The video comes at a time were relations between the two NATO allies are at a low point, with many ongoing disputes including over Aegean Sea boundaries.

READ MORE: Turkey and the Parthenon Marbles: Hot topics of Greek Prime Minister’s UN address.

Source: Ekathimerini.

New UK Prime Minister rejects possible deal with Greece to return the Parthenon Marbles

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The new Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Liz Truss, has rejected the possibility of a deal with Greece to return the Parthenon Marbles to Athens.

The Parthenon Marbles have been housed in the British Museum since the early 19th century after they were stolen off the Parthenon at the Acropolis in Athens by Lord Elgin.

But when asked during an interview with GB News whether she would consider a possible loan agreement with Greece, Ms Truss was immoveable.

“I do not support that,” Mr Truss said bluntly, without elaboration.

The Chairman of the British Museum, George Osborne, first proposed the possible loan agreement in June this year.

“A deal is to be done where we can tell both stories in Athens and in London if we both approach this without a load of preconditions, without a load of red lines…” Mr Osborne said at the time during an interview with LBC radio station.

Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, also hinted just this week that he would speak to Ms Truss about the return of the Parthenon Marbles during an intergovernmental meeting set for later this year.

Greece’s Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, wants to speak with Ms Truss about the Parthenon Marbles.

“At a time when Truss will be looking to build her credibility and when the UK is sort of cornered in terms of its overall image after the [Queen Elizabeth II’s] funeral it will be a fantastic gesture, and that’s what I’ll tell her,” Mitsotakis told the Sunday Times.

The UK PM’s latest statement though confirms that the journey to repatriating the Parthenon Marbles will not be smooth sailing despite Ms Truss’ appointment heralding a new age in British politics after the resignation of Boris Johnson – who also didn’t agree to the return of the Marbles.

READ MORE: ‘Ι will continue fighting until the Parthenon Marbles return to Greece’: Emanuel J. Comino.

Source: ART News.

‘Disrespect’: Frustration grows over plaque for world’s first modern milk bar in Sydney

What started as a way to commemorate the site of the world’s first modern milk bar at Sydney’s Martin Place has turned into a five year fiasco with the City of Sydney council.

This year marks the 90th anniversary of the opening of the Black & White Milk Bar created by Mick Adams (Joachim Tavlaridis) in 1932, and Greek Australian historians and descendants of Mr Adams are calling on the Council to finally provide a solution for where to place a historical plaque marking the site at 24 Martin Place, Sydney.

Macquarie University historian and co-author of Greek Cafes and Milk Bars in Australia, Leonard Janiszewski, along with photographer, Effy Alexakis, first applied to the City of Sydney’s historical ‘green plaques’ program in 2017 to have the site officially recognised.

Black & White 4d. Milk Bar interior, Martin Place, Sydney, NSW, 1934. Note the Hamilton Beach milkshake makers on the back bar. Photo courtesy L. Keldoulis, from the In Their Own Image: Greek-Australians, National Project Archives.

At the time, the Council’s historical office reviewed the application and approved the recommendation for a plaque to be produced.

But, according to Mr Janiszewski, the next step of placing the plaque at the exact site of Mr Adams’ milk bar, which is now the ANZ tower, has been thwarted by the overseas corporate owner of the building who would not agree to the plaque being placed on the structure.

In an email response seen by The Greek Herald, the Council’s Public Art Collections and Cultural Heritage has proposed a number of alternatives for the placement of the plaque. This includes several doors east of the site – where a competing milk bar was established a few years after the Black & White – or on a low wall away from the site and next to a water drain.

A suggested possible location for the plaque. Photo supplied.

Mr Janiszewski said these options have been rejected by himself and Mr Adams’ descendants as “disrespectful, too low down to be read vertically, and not on the original site.”

He said the Council did not fully address potential problems that could have arisen around the plaque during the planning of the roll out. For example: what would happen if building owners did not agree (as the plaques are designed only for placement on walls not within the pavement which Council has jurisdiction over), and if the building material itself was inappropriate for plaque placement.

“As a historian… I pointed out that if the plaque is placed a distance away from the original site of the Black & White Milk Bar, its placement becomes a historical deception. The plaque clearly states: ‘Site of’,” Mr Janiszewski told The Greek Herald.

The plaque. Photo supplied.

“I don’t think the family should be put through all of this and I actually think it’s showing a sense of disrespect to the Greek community at large.”

It has been five years since the plaque was first produced and Mr Janiszewski and Mr Adams’ descendants continue to write to the Council to push for other appropriate options for the plaque’s placement.

In that time, Mr Adams’ daughter, Lilian Keldoulis, passed away and his other daughter, Helen Gerondis, is currently unwell.

Now Mr Adams’ granddaughter, Janet France – the daughter of the late Ms Keldoulis, is fighting for a solution.

“We’re really devastated because… it just seems like a bit of a slap in the face,” Ms France told The Greek Herald, expressing her disappointment.

Mr Adams’ modern milk bar revolutionised the provision of a cold refreshment beverage – the milkshake – across the nation and later in Great Britain, Europe, New Zealand, South Africa, South Pacific Islands and even Japan.

Black & White 4d. Milk Bar exterior, Martin Place, Sydney, NSW, 1934. Mick Adams (back row, centre) with children from the Dalwood Children’s Health Home. Photo courtesy L. Keldoulis, from the In Their Own Image: Greek-Australians, National Project Archives.

With such a strong history and connection to the community, Ms France said she’d love to see this fiasco with the Council solved by the 90th anniversary of the milk bar this year on November 4.

“It’s something that would attract more tourists. It would be celebrating multicultural heritage. For the family it would be a celebration and recognition of all the hard work my grandfather did and everything he gave to the country,” Ms France said.

In a statement to The Greek Herald, a spokesperson for the City of Sydney Council said “despite numerous meetings with building management, negotiations with the building owners, and suggestions to install the plaque in several locations that would not impact the glass façade, the City has not been able to obtain consent.”

“The City recently suggested an alternative location for the plaque, closer to the original milk bar site, and consulted with stakeholders,” the spokesperson added.   

“The City is seeking consent from building owners’ at the new location and currently awaiting a response.”

Euro 2004 legend George Karagounis to partake in Sydney charity match

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Former Panathinaikos, Inter Milan and Fulham player, George Karagounis, is set to visit Sydney this month as part of an official tour hosted by Football Brilliance Academy and the Heartbeat of Football Foundation.

Karagounis, who was part of the UEFA Euro 2004 winning Greek squad, will be attending a charity gala dinner on Friday, October 14 at the Grand Roxy at Brighton-Le-Sands, where he will talk about his football experiences and the historic win.

Tickets for the Friday, October 14 Gala Dinner are being sold per table of 10, and can be booked via phone at 0415 348 852 or via email info@footballbrilliance.com.au.

Later in the month, Karagounis will be winding back the clock, putting on his boots and reliving the glory days as he partakes in the ‘Karagounis Legends Game’ at Leichhardt’s Lambert Park on Sunday, 23 October.

With gates opening at 2pm, Football Brilliance Academy and Karagounis himself will be conducting a training session for children before the charity match kick-offs at 5pm.

Karagounis’ 11 players will be playing against a mixed team of ex-football stars and current professional footballers.

Tickets for the Sunday, October 23 ‘Karagounis Legends Game’ are being sold individually for $25 or $100 for a family pack of 5. Tickets are available online via Eventbrite.