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Former Sydney Olympic coach, Arthur ‘Archie’ Kazas, passes away

Arthur ‘Archie’ Kazas, a former First Grade Strength and Conditioning Coach at Sydney Olympic FC, has passed away today.

Mr Kazas, who was also a long-time supporter and member of Sydney Olympic, was “battling some major health concerns” prior to his death, the Club said in a statement.

“On behalf of everyone at Sydney Olympic, we are thinking of his family and friends at this time. We thank him for his contribution and we will miss seeing his friendly face around the grounds,” Sydney Olympic CEO, John Boulous, tells The Greek Herald.

Minister Courtney Houssos slams delay to remove flammable cladding from NSW apartment buildings

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The state government remains under fire to act on promises to remove flammable cladding from some 239 high-risk apartment towers. 

Courtney Houssos, Shadow Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation, says NSW is lagging behind Victoria to remove the cladding.

“At this rate, Victoria will have removed cladding from half of its buildings before NSW even begins,” she says.
 
NSW Labor says the Victorian government has helped 40 apartment buildings remove flammable cladding.
 
The NSW government’s two-year project to remove the cladding, originally scheduled to commence this year, has been put on hold until next year. 

NSW Building Commissioner David Chandler, whose office is overseeing Project Remediate, says the project was expected to begin as soon as COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. 

“We estimate the project is between four and six weeks behind schedule. But we are on track to begin assessment and triage works in the coming months, and remediation works will commence straight after the traditional summer break in the trades industries,” he’s quoted in Sydney Morning Herald.

“COVID-19 has impacted the construction industry and how we can operate through lockdown.”

Houssos says a “badly designed building is not going to be fixed by a badly designed Government program”. 

She says concerned residents are consequently taking matters into their own hands.
 
“The NSW Government’s answer to dodgy developers is to allow defects to be repaired by unlicensed and unregulated contractors,” she says.
 
“The reputable tradies want to get the unlicensed cowboys out of the industry, which is in everyone’s interest.”

The project comes almost seven years after a fire in Melbourne’s Lacrosse apartment tower revealed the dangers of flammable cladding.

The Grenfell Tower blaze in London in 2017, which claimed the lives of 72 people, further weighted concerns worldwide.

Boxer George Kambosos Jr. secures legal claim to IBF over music video app Triller

George Kambosos Junior, 28, has convinced boxing governing body, the IBF, to declare that video social networking site Triller has defaulted the terms of their $8.3 million purse bid to host his unified lightweight clash with Teófimó López.

The IBF made a decision over the weekend to transfer the broadcast rights – and about US$10 million in lost expenses – from Triller to Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Sports, the next highest bidder.

“It was a great decision by the IBF. Triller was in default of the contract so now Matchroom has picked up the event and they will be promoting the fight,” he says.

The fight is now slated for November 13, but Kambosos says he’d “be ready today if the fight was on.”

Teófimó Lopez and George Kambosos (right) started promoting their fight in April but still don’t know when they’ll fight.(Getty Images: Al Bello for Triller)

“I was never ripping anyone off. Triller said I tried to shake them down. What do they think I am, part of the mafia or something?” Kambosos says.

“It’s been pretty stressful. At the end of the day, I will walk away with about $2.2 million which is life-changing.” 

“It is a great reward for all the hard work. This money sets up my wife and three kids for the future, but I’m really here for the legacy and these beautiful belts which I will be bringing home to Australia.”

Video social networking site Triller won the bid to host Teófimó Lopez’s clash against Kambosos in February but the match has been riddled with delays, in small part due to COVID-19 restrictions. 

Kambosos, 28, continues to train in Sydney.

“I train extremely hard. There is no other athlete in the country that puts his body through hell like I do. I have a very strict routine. I put my body through mass amounts of pain and sacrifice to make sure when I rock up to the fight, that I’m 100 percent ready for whatever my opponent brings.

“The Triller stuff is history, but the good thing is they have given me mainstream exposure around the world because of this drama.

“When my name is in the lights in the US, I’m the face of Australian boxing.”

Source: Daily Telegraph

Greece to extend fence, deploy more officers at border with Turkey

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Greece will deploy an additional 250 border officers at the Evros river and extend the fence at its border with Turkey. 

Minister of Civil Protection Takis Theodorikakos revealed the plans on Sunday. 

“On these borders of our country with Turkey, the borders of the European Union with Turkey, we have completed 37 kilometers of the fence that has enhanced the security of our border,” he said.

“A secure border is a precondition for Greeks everywhere to be safe.”

Theodorikakos is currently touring the region with local political and security officials.

Source: Ekathimerini

Dozens evacuate as Evia hit by floods, mudslides

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Dozens of residents in Evia have had to evacuate after floods and mudslides hit the northern part of the island on Sunday. 

Roads became impassable and beaches were filled with mud sliding down from nearby mountains but there have been no casualties. 

Deputy Prime Minister Christos Triantopoulos led an inspection of the villages of Vasilika and Agia Anna soon thereafter. 

He announced that the government will accelerate a €20 million (AU $31.67 million) program to aid the devastated areas as local officials pleaded for action. 

“The State, as in other cases, will help repair this damage,” said Triantopoulos, adding that funds will start flowing this coming week.

The storm had been buffeting northern and central Greece since Thursday. 

A weather station on Mt. Pelio, a few hundred kilometres north of Evia, has recorded 700 mm of rain since Thursday.

Evia is still reeling from devastating forest fires which hit the island last summer as part of Greece’s worst heatwave in over 30 years. 

Evia made up more than a third of the scorched 300,000 acres of forest, bush, and farmland. 

Scientists say there’s little doubt climate change from the burning of coal, oil, and natural gas is driving extreme events, such as heatwaves, droughts, wildfires, floods, and storms. 

Source: Associated Press

Are you fully vaccinated? Here’s what you can do from today in NSW

How many visitors can I host in my home? Can I go on a regional holiday?

Here’s what you need to know about the new freedoms in NSW if you have had both jabs. 

10 people allowed in your home, 30 outdoors 

10 fully vaccinated visitors (not including kids under 12) will be allowed to gather inside a home and up to 30 people can gather outdoors. 

For those not fully vaccinated, only two people will be allowed to gather outdoors.

All non-critical shops – including restaurants and hairdressers – are open

All non-critical shops — including hospitality venues — are allowed to reopen with the spacing rule of one person per 4 square metres inside and one person per 2 square metres outside.

Businesses will be responsible for making sure patrons check in to their premises and have proof of their vaccination status, with penalties applying to those who do not follow the rules.

Restaurant bookings will be capped at 20 people and, while diners will have to be seated while drinking inside, patrons will now be allowed to stand and drink when outdoors.

Singing and dancing are still off the cards when inside a venue, however, dancing will be allowed outside.

Personal services — including hairdressers, barbers, tattoo parlors, and beauty salons — can open their doors with one person per 4 square metres, capped at a maximum of five clients per premises.

All adults, vaccinated or not, must wear a mask when inside public venues, at airports, and on public transport.

Kids under 12 are exempt from the indoor mask rule.

Masks are no longer required outside unless you work front-of-house in hospitality.

Gyms and indoor sporting facilities are open

Gyms and indoor sporting facilities can open their doors.

Like all indoor venues they, too, must operate under the 4-square-metre rule, with classes capped at 20 people. Masks are not required when exercising.

Indoor swimming pools will reopen for swimming lessons, training and rehabilitation. 

Up to 100 people allowed at weddings and funerals

Up to 100 fully vaccinated guests can attend both wedding ceremonies and receptions as long as density caps are followed.

If there are unvaccinated guests, ceremonies must be capped at five people and receptions will not be allowed at all.

Eating and drinking must be done while seated but dancing is permitted.

Premier Dominic Perrottet also confirmed that, while indoor singing is banned, vaccinated performers are exempt from the rule, with a 10-person cap on choirs at places of worship. 

Up to 100 fully vaccinated people can attend funerals, with a 10-person limit for those who are not fully vaccinated.

Churches and places of worship can open, subject to density limits.

Two adult visitors allowed per day in aged care homes 

Under the rules, two visitors per day aged 12 years and over will be permitted to visit an aged-care home if the visitors are fully vaccinated.

For those wanting younger children to visit these facilities, NSW Health says a plan will be developed “in due course”. 

Up to 5000 people are allowed at theme parks, stadiums

Up to 5,000 people can attend stadiums, racecourses, and themes parks under density requirements, unless an exemption is provided by the state government.

Art galleries, museums, and libraries will reopen, subject to the 4-square-meter rule.

Theatres and cinemas can return if they follow that rule or have 75 percent capacity, whichever is greater.

Amusement centres and nightclubs remain closed.

Regional travel within Greater Sydney is allowed

From today, people in regional areas will be able to holiday in other regional areas.

People who live in Greater Sydney — including the Central Coast, Wollongong, Shellharbour, and the Blue Mountains — who are fully vaccinated will be allowed to travel into the regions for any reason, except for a holiday.

Some of those reasons might include work, inspecting property, or caring for people.

Travel between Greater Sydney and regional areas will be allowed once the state reaches the 80 percent double-vaccination mark.

Campgrounds and caravan parks are reopening, including for people who are not fully vaccinated.  

Fully vaccinated citizens can carpool, but others are still only able to share a ride with members of their household.

What’s next? 

The Monday after New South Wales passes the 80 percent double-vaccination hurdle, even more restrictions will lift. 

At this stage, that’s expected to happen on Monday, October 25.

Source: ABC News

George Vardas says Greece must ‘seize the day’ after UNESCO decision on Parthenon Sculptures

By George Vardas

Vice-President, The Australian Parthenon Committee

On 29 September 2021, UNESCO through its independent cultural heritage advisory body issued a decision or declaration highly critical of the UK Government’s ongoing failure to deal with the vexed issue of the return of the Parthenon Sculptures, cultural artefacts that were plundered by Lord Elgin at the beginning of the nineteenth century.

To understand why the UNESCO Committee finally came to this position it is necessary to consider the history of the seemingly futile attempts to bring the British and Greek sides together in an international forum to seek to resolve what is arguably the world’s oldest and most well-known cultural property dispute.

READ MORE: UNESCO puts pressure on UK to hold talks with Greece over Parthenon Marbles.

In 1976, at the request of UNESCO, a committee of experts met in Venice to study the question of the restitution or return of lost cultural property, whether as a result of foreign or colonial occupation or following illicit traffic before the entry into force, for the States concerned, of the UNESCO 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property.  It was recommended that UNESCO proceed with the creation of an international body responsible for finding ways to assist with and facilitate bilateral negotiations between the countries concerned for the return or restitution of cultural property.

The UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property to its Countries of Origin or its Restitution in case of Illicit Appropriation (ICPRCP) was established at the 20th session of the Conference General of UNESCO in 1978 as a permanent intergovernmental body. Pursuant to Article 4 of its Statutes, the Committee is responsible, inter alia, for seeking ways and means of facilitating bilateral negotiations for restitution or return; promoting multilateral and bilateral cooperation with a view to the restitution or return of cultural property to its countries of origin and promoting exchanges of cultural property.

Cultural property has been defined as a people’s “irreplaceable heritage, the most representative works of a culture”.  It was in that context that M. Amadou-Mahtar M’Bow, the then Director-General of UNESCO, issued this plea on 7 June 1978:

“The return of a work of art or record to the country which created it enables a people to recover part of its memory and identity and proves that the long dialogue between civilizations which shapes the history of the world is still continuing in an atmosphere of mutual respect between nations.”

The Greek Case and the British stonewall defence:

At the UNESCO World Conference on Cultural Policies held in Mexico in August 1982 Melina Mercouri, the Greek Minister for Culture, famously moved a resolution for the return of the sculptures.  Her British counterpart replied that the UK Government “could not interfere in the affairs of a private establishment like the British Museum”.  A harbinger of the strategy deployed by the British side for the next four decades.

READ MORE: On This Day: Melina Mercouri calls for the Parthenon Marbles to be returned to Greece.

Since 1984, ICPRCP has made countless ‘recommendations’ for the resolution of the dispute between Greece and the United Kingdom over the Parthenon Sculptures – which the British side has continued to ignore. As early as the fourth session the ICPRCP noted that it was important for it to make sure that the negotiations over the so-called ‘Elgin Marbles’ did not reach a deadlock but  continued with a view to achieving a solution acceptable to both parties.

At the ninth session of the Committee held in Paris in September 1996, a by now all too familiar recommendation was adopted for the Director-General of UNESCO “to continue his good offices to resolve this issue and to undertake, as a matter of priority, further discussions with both states”.  

However, the British side continued to argue that the British Museum was independent of the Government and that its enabling statute limited the circumstances in which it may dispose of any object in its collection, going so far as to suggest that even if the British Museum Act was amended but the British Museum Trustees  were not prepared to return the marbles, any attempt at compulsion by passing further laws could be construed as being confiscatory and contrary to Article 1 of the First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights .  It was subsequently leaked to The Economist that this argument had simply been raised as a “delaying tactic”.

READ MORE: ‘A classy act’: Philhellene, Stephen Fry, on returning the Parthenon Marbles to Greece.

Before a 2000 House of Common Select Committee inquiring into the illicit trade in cultural property, the British Museum emphasised that it holds “in trust for the nation and the world a collection of art and antiquities” and that it constitutes a “reference library of world cultures”, providing an “international context where cultures can be experienced by all, studied in depth and compared and contrasted across time and place”.

For good measure they also claimed the sculptures are now an integral part of English heritage:

“The Sculptures from the Parthenon now in the British Museum have … been in London longer than the modern state of Greece has been in existence.  As a result, they have become part of this country’s heritage and have acted as a focus for western European culture and civilisation.  They have found a home in a museum that grew out of the eighteenth century ‘Enlightenment’, whereby culture is seen to transcend national boundaries.”

The eleventh session of the Committee was held in Cambodia in March 2001. The Committee noted that the issue of the Parthenon Marbles was still pending.  According to Lyndel Prott, a well-renown Australian cultural law expert and then director of UNESCO’s Cultural Heritage Division, the issue of the Parthenon Sculptures was very important and UNESCO had been “trying to avoid any confrontation” during the meetings of the Intergovernmental Committee. 

Well up until now they had succeeded in avoiding conflict.

In 2003, the new director of the British Museum, Neil MacGregor, repeated the mantra of the museum when he criticised Greece’s position of “perpetual possession of all the Parthenon sculptures” and provided the following rationale:

“(H)alf the marbles are lost forever.  We’re talking about the proportions of what remains.  They can’t get them up onto the Parthenon because it’s a ruin, so the argument that one normally makes for gathering things together from the same ensemble, that you are restoring or recovering the work of art, doesn’t apply here.  One’s got to recognise that their life as part of the Parthenon is over.  It seems to me rather a fortunate accident of history that about half of what survived is in London.”

This condescending attitude was to be echoed by his successor, Dr Hartwig Fisher, some 16 years later when Fischer infamously described Lord Elgin’s plunder and removal of half of the sculptures from the Parthenon as a “creative act”. 

ICPRCP again met in Paris in September 2010 at the 17th Session and issued yet another “recommendation” in which it again invited the Director General to assist in convening the necessary meetings between Greece and the United Kingdom, with the aim of reaching a mutually acceptable solution to the issue of the Parthenon Sculptures.

Greece has been fighting for the Parthenon Sculptures for decades.

But the true nature of the British response was laid bare in the UK House of Commons on 22 June 2011 when the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, was asked by Andrew George, a Liberal Democrat MP and leading British campaigner for the sculptures, whether Britain was prepared to put right a 200-year wrong by giving back the marbles.  Cameron was interrupted as he was about to say that he did not agree with that view . 

The ‘witty’ exchange between the Speaker of the House and Cameron was recorded on Hansard:

The Speaker:  “Order.  I want to hear the Prime Minister’s views on marbles.”

The Prime Minister: “The short answer is that we are not going to lose them.”

The British Government has never shown any respect for the Greek claim and has continued to resist attempts to have a meaningful and genuine dialogue between the countries.  Even Greece’s attempt in 2013 to invoke the mediation and conciliation procedures available through UNESCO were belatedly rejected by both the British Museum and the UK Ministry of Culture.

The meetings held of the ICPRPC in 2014, 2016 and 2018 all concluded with the same predictable recommendation urging the parties to continue talking. 

At the 22nd Session of ICPRCP: UNESCO bares it teeth

The 22nd Session of the UNESCO Committee took place on 27-29 September 2021 in Paris (with many delegates attending virtually) after the original conference scheduled in May 2020 was postponed due to the pandemic. 

It was to break the mold of previous ICPRCP meetings.

The Egyptian diplomat, Maged Mosleh, was voted as Chairperson of the Committee with Vice-Chairs taken by Greece, Japan, Mexico and Moldova. 

Apart from procedural matters the Committee’s agenda focussed on two items, the Parthenon Sculptures (Greece) and the case of the Broken Hill Man Skull (Zambia).  There was also consideration of a case of an illicitly acquired Benin bronze owned by a Belgian art dealer but detained by British authorities pending resolution of the dispute between Nigeria and Belgium.

At the beginning of the first day the Committee stated its desire that member states conduct bilateral negotiations on the return and restitution of cultural property and in relation to the case of the Parthenon Sculptures specifically evoked the recommendation from the last session and expressed its continuing concerns and invited both Greece and the United Kingdom to find an “equally acceptable solution”.

READ MORE: Boris Johnson rules out return of Parthenon marbles to Greece.

The Broken Hill Skull

On the first day, Zambia presented its case for the return of the Broken Hill Man Skull which was the first historically significant human fossil found in Africa when it was discovered in a mine in 1921.  The skull was ‘donated’ by the Rhodesia Broken Hill Mine Company to the British Museum, but later transferred to the Natural History Museum. The skull is now on display in the Human Evolution Gallery of that museum. 

Since the 1970s, the Zambian government has expressed a desire for the Broken Hill skull to be returned to its country of origin. In 2018, the fossil was discussed at the ICPRPC with the outcome that Zambia and the UK would pursue bilateral discussion. A spokesperson for the Museum Trustees added that the Museum “looks forward and is committed to constructive participation in this dialogue”.’

But the obstructive mindset of the UK side was not far from the surface. After the Zambian delegate explained the case of the skull and its immense cultural significance to his country, the UK representative, Rosie Weetch, the Head of Cultural Property at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), and formerly a curator at the British Museum, proceeded to re-state the British position by repeating, in part, the British response back in 2018 which relevantly asserted that the museum is a public institution that operates with independence from Government and its collection is the property and responsibility of the Museum Trustees – not of the UK Government.

And for completeness, and this is not lost on the Greek delegation, Ms Weetch reminded the ICPRPC of the “strict legal constraints” on the powers of Trustees to give away, transfer or exchange items under the British Museum Act (which also governs the Natural History Museum).

Broken Hill skull.

Despite this, the UK representative added rather disingenuously that the UK  “would like to engage in meaningful bilateral discussions”.

The ICPRPC Chair’s exasperation was palpable. He asked:

“What is the British position as opposed to the position of the Natural History Museum’s Board of Trustees?  What are their criteria?  The role of the ICPRCP is to look at best practices and in this spirit we need to see what is the best path for returning illicitly acquired objects.  The Committee needs to enlarge its scope.”

Amongst interventions by other State members, Greece declared that it warmly supported the Zambian request and took the opportunity to remind the Committee that the ICPRCP is an intergovernmental committee which was established to deal with issues between member states and that they should not be delegated to issues between museums.  In the words of the Greek representative:

“The UK Government cannot distance itself from the actions of the museum’s Board of Trustees.  The use of legislative provisions to inhibit/prohibit the return of cultural property is unhelpful.  Greece expects and wants tangible results.”

The Greek delegation further noted that the law was passed to protect the interests of the museum and in this case the skull had been taken by a colonial power.

The Case of the Parthenon Sculptures

On the second day of the ICPCRP Greece made its presentation via video conference from the Acropolis Museum in Athens.  Its delegation comprised the new Director General of the Acropolis Museum, Nikolaos Stampolidis, the Secretary General of Culture, George Didaskalou, the Head of the Directorate of Documentation and Protection of Cultural Goods, Vasiliki Papageorgiou, and the experienced and highly-regarded legal advisor from the Special Legal Service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dr Artemis Papathanassiou.

The presentation was direct and to the point. The dismembered Parthenon Sculptures, split between London and Athens, must be reunited.

Dr Papathanassiou noted that the Greek request has been on the Committee’s agenda as a pending case since 1984.  In 2013 Greece sought mediation but the British side emphatically refused to participate.  The British government continues to claim that it is a matter for the British Museum Trustees and have relegated the case from intergovernmental to one between a State and a foreign institution or, alternatively, to an issue between museums.  As Dr Papathanassiou stated, as far as international law is concerned, the obligation to return state cultural artefacts lies squarely on the government and not on a museum.

READ MORE: Dr Artemis Papathanassiou reveals progress made on returning Parthenon Sculptures in Greek Australian Dialogue Series.

The Greek delegation also submitted that recent Ottoman archival scholarship and historical data indisputably prove that Elgin never obtained permission or approval to remove the sculptures so that they were never legally acquired as contended by the British Museum.

The Greek delegation was emphatic during its presentation:

1. The British side (that is to say, the British Museum Trustees) argue that UNESCO involvement in the matter is not the best way forward and therefore mediation held under the aegis of UNESCO would not carry the debate substantially forward.

2. One might reasonably wonder here why the British side does not agree to proceed to mediation if the legality of the British Museum’s ownership is as clear and uncontested as the British side claims it to be?

3. The unique wonder of the Parthenon Sculptures serves to refute the argument made by some museums that any legal decision to return them to Greece would be a precedent for emptying Western museums of cultural treasures, which have been looted or stolen or otherwise acquired under dubious circumstances.

4. The Greek response to this argument is that the Parthenon Sculptures differ from other museum objects in that they emanate from a surviving monument and their reunification to the parent structure would restore the integrity of a world heritage monument and would not create a precedent for other acts of return.  The Parthenon is more than the symbol of Western Civilisation.

5. The British Museum states on its website that it “takes its commitment to be a world museum seriously”.  If this is the case, may one ask the British why the Parthenon Gallery is closed to the public since the beginning of 2020, until further notice?

6. The sculptures can no longer remain imprisoned, waiting for the completion of the British Museum ‘Master Plan’.  The British Museum, in any case, does not cover the necessary safety conditions of exposure.  Is it raining again in the Parthenon Galleries?

7. For a museum to be able to boast that it is global or encyclopaedic it also must first teach ethos.  The British Museum cannot do this with any kind of abductions or, even more so, with detachments from a global monument-symbol, such as the Parthenon.

8. By returning its members, its sculptures, to Greece, it could borrow (or be lent) works from Greece in order to display them in its galleries.  And if it does the same with other works and antiquities to which there are claims, then it could be a museum of true world culture that  presents artefacts from many cultures with the appropriate ethos,  at the wish of the peoples who are owners of their cultural heritage.

9. The British contend that they believe that the British Museum is the best place for the Sculptures to be seen in the context of their rich contribution to the history of the whole of humanity.  Despite the British Museum’s director’s description of Elgin’s actions as a “creative act”, the only truly creative act would be the return of the Sculptures to where they belong, to the Parthenon, the symbol of Western Civilisation.

10. For those who want the sculptures back in Athens, the Acropolis Museum’s top-floor Parthenon gallery is the perfect antidote to the dark Duveen gallery in the British Museum.  

11. Despite repetition of well-known British arguments concerning Greece’s long standing just demand for rehabilitating a unique world heritage monument which remains a mutilated wonder of the world, Greece calls on the British government to reconsider their stand and to recognise, among other things, that the international claim for the restitution of the aesthetic, in principle, unity of the Parthenon outweighs any other possible counter arguments.

The UK response was sadly predictable.

The British delegate, Rosie Weetch, once again resorted to the well-worn arguments mounted by the British Museum in the past, even shamelessly re-reading a number of the talking points from the British submission made at the 2018 ICPRCP Session:

The UK Government notes the strong aspirations of the Greek Government to see all the surviving sculptures from the Parthenon reunified in the Acropolis Museum.

The Parthenon sculptures in the British Museum were legally acquired under the laws pertaining at the time and are legally owned by the Trustees of the Museum, which is independent of Government.

The Trustees of the British Museum believe that the Museum is the best place for the sculptures to be seen in the context of their rich contribution to the history of the whole of humanity. The British Museum is a world museum and millions of people from all over the world are able to visit the Museum free of charge.

The Trustees have never been asked for a loan of the Parthenon sculptures by the Greek Government, only for their permanent transfer to Athens. The Trustees will consider any request for any part of the collection to be borrowed and then returned, provided the borrowing institution acknowledges the British Museum’s ownership and that the normal loan conditions are satisfied.

Ms Weetch also claimed that the British Museum offers the “sense of a wider cultural context” for the sculptures and that it will continue to improve interpretation of the Parthenon Marbles in its collection.  The British Museum, she claimed, is committed to “respectful collaboration” worldwide to the sharing and lending of the collection for the benefit of the widest possible audience to promote Ancient Greek culture.

ICPRCP Reaction

The Committee Chair wryly noted that the UK Government is quite clear in presenting the view of the Trustees of the British Museum and pointedly asked: “what is the government’s position?”

Other delegates expressed similar frustration. Egypt said it was striking to have a case with which the  committee had been dealing since 1984 and urged that a strong decision was needed given the attitude displayed by the UK intervention.  The sculptures were made by the Greeks in Greece to honour the Greeks.  The claim that the British Museum is a “universal museum” was totally dangerous, according to the Egyptian delegate, as well as irrational and was equivalent to “what is mine is mine; what is yours is also mine and I have to show it to the world, including to you”.

The delegate from Zambia agreed and stressed that the Committee needed to take more drastic measures, calling for a “tough decision” to be given because of the repetitive UK arguments.

Italy said that it was time for a solution.  This was also needed to lend momentum to the role and credibility of the ICPRCP, particularly as the claim by Greece goes to the issues of memory and identity and raises matters of diplomatic, historical and aesthetic significance, and not just legal.

Cameroon  observed that the three cases before the ICPRCP from Greece, Zambia and Nigeria shared one thing in common, namely, an asymmetrical relationship in history where the artefacts were looted or otherwise obtained in a colonial context.

Palestine described the call for the return of the Parthenon Sculptures as a cri de coeur which stands out and calls for mediation between member states.  The Palestinian delegate asked why the British Government had refused mediation.

Syria, as an observer state, declared that the Parthenon Sculptures belong to Greece and regretted that the negotiations are not going anywhere just as the role of the UK Government continues to be vague.

Cyprus joined the chorus and urged the ICPRCP Committee to comply with the will of Greece.

Parthenon Sculptures in the British Museum.

Greece responded that although the UK and Greek sides were working on a joint recommendation, it lamented the fact that since 1984 there had been sixteen separate recommendations adopted by the ICPRCP with no positive outcome.  Greece urged the committee to take a decision for the return of specific cultural property, especially as Greece’s call back in 2013 for mediation and a productive dialogue for resolution of its just request had been rejected.  Nothing is happening, lamented Artemis Papathanassiou.

Argentina urged the Committee to take a decision and stated that it supported Greece.

Egypt again intervened and declared that ICPRCP did not need a seventeenth identical recommendation and that it was time to take a firm stand.  Egypt was not prepared to accept the British argument that it is for the British Museum to decide; the responsibility of the UK State is essential.

The Committee Chair, Mr Mosleh, at this point had heard enough, declaring that the case of the Parthenon Sculptures had inspired the Committee to look at the bigger picture and it was important not to dilute the case.  He urged his colleagues to take a decision and pointedly added:

“I did not hear the UK position. I heard the British Museum Trustees’ position”. 

The Chair concluded that the UNESCO Committee was supporting Greece.

And with that the 22nd Session of the UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee showed its hand and unanimously handed down Decision  22. COM 17 (sponsored by Zambia) which reads as follows:

  1. Recalling article 4 paragraphs 1 and 2 of the ICPRCP Statutes.
  2. Noting that the request for the Return of the Parthenon Sculptures is inscribed in its Agenda since 1984.
  3. Recalling its 16 Recommendations on the matter.
  4. Recalling further that the Parthenon is an emblematic monument of outstanding universal value inscribed in the World Heritage List.
  5. Aware of the legitimate and rightful demand of Greece.
  6. Acknowledging that Greece requested the UK in 2013 to enter into mediation in accordance to the UNESCO Rules of Procedure on Mediation and Conciliation.
  7. Recognising that the case has an intergovernmental character and, therefore, the obligation to return the Parthenon Sculptures lies squarely on the UK Government.
  8. Expresses its deep concern that the issue still remains pending.
  9. Expresses, further, its disappointment that its respective recommendations have not been observed by the UK.
  10. Expresses its strong conviction that states involved with return or restitution cases brought before the ICPRCP should make use of the UNESCO Mediation and Conciliation Procedures with a view to their resolution.
  11. Calls on the UK to reconsider its stand and proceed to a bona fide dialogue with Greece on the matter.
The Parthenon Sculptures exhibit in the British Museum has been temporarily closed.

Conclusion

Although the ICPRCP is an advisory body, it is specifically clothed by UNESCO as its cultural heritage conscience.

The UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee expressly acknowledged the “legitimate and rightful demand” of Greece and after noting the unsuccessful attempts dating back to 2013 for mediation to take place under the auspices of UNESCO, it declared that this cultural dispute is and was  intergovernmental in character and as a result the obligation to return the Parthenon Sculptures rests squarely on the United Kingdom.

According to some reports, the UK government was taken by surprise that the UNESCO committee handed down such a strongly-worded decision rather than merely adopting the usual recommendations of previous sessions.  A government spokesperson  was quoted as saying that the British side would challenge the decision because of issues “relating to fact and procedures with UNESCO” without specifying what they were.

And then, as if on autocue, the spokesperson continued:

“Our position is clear – the Parthenon Sculptures were acquired legally in accordance with the law at the time. The British Museum operates independently of the government and free from political interference. All decisions relating to collections are taken by the Museum’s trustees.”

This response, although entirely predictable, underscores what many have known for years.  For almost four decades, culminating in the just-concluded 22nd Session of the UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee,  the British side has displayed its utter contempt for the UNESCO process as well as its total lack of respect for Greece by failing to engage with the Greek side in any genuine attempt to find a resolution.  The UK Government by its own submission made to the Paris conference made it abundantly clear that it is nothing more than a mouthpiece for the British Museum and seeks to avoid any meaningful and bona fide dialogue with Greece. 

The time for more mutually respectful dialogue (for which some are still calling) is well and truly over. The contemptuous and disingenuous position adopted by the British side has put paid to that. 

And, in any event, the current Conservative Government in Whitehall (beholden as it is to a colonialist-derived  ‘retain and explain’ mindset) is most unlikely to change its position in what has clearly become a Cultural Groundhog Day.

Greece must now seize the day and use the considerable cultural diplomatic and soft power cache it has built up both within UNESCO and the General Assembly of the United Nations for an application to be made to the International Court of Justice for an advisory opinion on the legal question of the return of culturally significant looted artefacts to their countries of origin.

Without such decisive action, nothing will change and the Parthenon Sculptures will remain locked away in the now closed Duveen Gallery of the British Museum.

‘Bring on the 11th’: Lunch spots are filling fast at Bill Drakopoulos’ Sydney restaurants

Sydneysiders who are still deciding which restaurant to book when the city emerges from lockdown best hurry, as many high-profile venues are rapidly filling their reservations lists through to the end of the year.

The easing of COVID-19 restrictions to allow in-restaurant dining from October 11 couldn’t have come at a better time, with the warmer weather encouraging people to eat outside and by the water.

Bill Drakopoulos, who counts Ormeggio, Ripples Milsons Point and The Fenwick in Balmain as part of his Sydney Restaurant Group portfolio, told Good Food he couldn’t be happier.

The Fenwick in Balmain.

Mr Drakopoulos said Ormeggio at The Spit in Mosman is already booked for many group sittings on weekends through to December.

“For most of our sites, even though they’re on the water and ideal for tourists, the cornerstone of the business is locals,” Mr Drakopoulos said.

“I have been doing this for 40 years and sharing with friends is the way to dine. Order a few dishes, engage, have fun. Bring on the 11th!”

Source: Good Food.

Maria Dalamaras shares her top five social media tips for small businesses

Maria Dalamaras is a mum, travel addict and lover of wine, delving into the world of digital marketing. She has a psychology background and a natural desire to help people.

This passion for people and everything social media led her to climb out of the corporate space in 2018 to chase her dream of becoming an entrepreneur.

She launched the Rio Consulting Group, a boutique creative agency in Sydney which supports small to medium sized enterprises that have recognised the importance of digital presence by creating online engagement through creative content and unique marketing strategies.

In saying this, Maria has shared the following expert tips to make sure your social media presence is relevant:

1.     Brand awareness. Australians are spending more time online now than ever, now is the time for you to be sharing your brand’s story and connecting with your audience.

2.     Engage with your audience. Current lockdowns have limited interactions we are having with our community. Physical interactions have now shifted to online interactions. Ask questions, create polls and connect with your online audience.

Maria Dalamaras shares her top social media tips for small businesses.

There are multiple tools, paid and unpaid available to help small businesses create engaging content. My favourite tool to use when creating content is Canva. My favourite tool to use when creating video content is Inshot

3.     Online shopping. According to an IBIS World Industry Analysis, online shopping has increased in Australia by 35% since the start of the pandemic. A strong recommendation is to utilise all online shopping tools across your digital platforms.

4.     Get Creative. Increased video content is currently dominating social media platforms. According to the latest GWI Social Media Report, ‘Entertaining and inspiring content is the key to profitable social commerce.’

Reels are the video format that is currently trending on  Instagram. Below are some items to help you create reels: Tripod for your phone, Light ring, Microphone for voiceovers

5.     Website. Your website is the backbone of your online presence. All efforts put into social media will drive your customer back to your website. A website helps build credibility of your business. Ensure your website has an excellent design and usability to keep customers engaged.

It’s important to get creative with your content.

A successful website is a well organised website which excels in both form and function. These are the 4 principles our team at Rio follows when designing and developing a website:

  • Purpose: The first step in the design process is to identify ‘What do you want to accomplish with this website.’
  • Visually appealing: Your website needs to look good to captivate your audience. Colour and fonts are very important when designing your website.
  • Feature relevant content: Your website is the home of your content. This is your opportunity to showcase your capabilities/ products/ services.
  • Ease of site navigation. Aim for intuitive and simple. No one likes to browse a website that requires multiple clicks to get to their designated page.

And last but not least, to build an engaged community on social platforms it’s important to post different types of content. Here are some tips when creating content:

  • Educational: tutorials, guides, tips
  • Promotional: testimonials, benefits, results
  • Personal: behind the scenes, fun facts about your business
  • Community: Q&As, FAQ
  • Entertaining: Quotes, fun reels.

READ MORE: Greek Australian mothers named finalists in prestigious entrepreneur awards for 2021.

Barry Nicolaou shares his 5 step process to having a mental health conversation

A mental health check-in can be a difficult conversation to begin. Below is a 5 step dialogue process that can begin and nurture a conversation.

By Barry Nicolaou.

1) Ask them how things are with the intention to break through the ‘fine’ barrier. The fine barrier is when you ask a question and the answer comes back somewhere in the vicinity of ‘I’m ok or I’m truly fine’ – which you know is a cover.

2) Don’t offer solutions. Just listen when you’ve broken through the fine barrier (that’s an achievement).

3) Don’t judge. You may secretly go to judgment as they reveal the tapestry of their challenges. Try not to judge or secretly compare their problems with others (or your own) you feel are worse.

4) Wait for a question before you speak. When someone asks a question, they’re eager for an answer. Wait for the question. Then they’re ready to discuss a possible way forward with you.

5) Be a better listener than talker. People usually already have the solutions to their challenges but are unwilling to travel that road alone.

Lastly, don’t forget to thank them for choosing you.

Barry Nicolaou.

Who is Barry Nicolaou?

Barry’s ability to locate and define personal purpose in the mental health space has lead him to the publication and #1 Best Selling ranking of his book; The 11 Master Secrets to Business Success and Personal Fulfilment. 

COVID-19 has seen Barry take his strategies to the corporate world and instill cultural ‘people first’ strategies in some of Australia’s most dynamic companies. His passion lies in deconstructing the layers beneath personal cognitive fear, deep rooted anxiety, indecision, subconscious paradigms, inherited thinking and their connection to real-world expectations and experiences.

His presentation on Gratitude Leadership and numerous mental health programs assist businesses excel at what they do best by understanding our individual need for connection and appreciation 

“I feel privileged to have great clients and appear on podcasts by being a sincere conduit between anxiety, chronic stress and burnout and a genuine light at the end of the tunnel,” Barry says.