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Foreign Minister Payne: Greek Australians play important role in advancing bilateral relations

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By Panagiotis Dalatariof.

Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne made her first official visit to Greece on Wednesday and met with her Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias.

The Greek Herald was among the only three media that were given an exemption to attend and report on the first official visit of an Australian Foreign Minister to Greece in 10 years.

‘We are proud of Greeks who immigrated to Australia’:

During the joint press conference of the two leaders, Dendias welcomed Payne to Greece and focused on the relations between Greece and Australia and on the ties that remain strong over time.

“Timeless relationships, based on inseparable bonds of friendship, have been forged between our peoples,” Dendias said, while stressing that the presence of Australia’s Ambassador to Greece, Arthur Spyrou, is a link between the two countries.

“And we are, and I want to say, particularly proud of the Greeks who immigrated to Australia and integrated into Australian society and contributed to the progress and prosperity of their new homeland.

“Our expatriates in Australia are the solid foundation, the bridge for the development and strengthening of ties, not only of friendship, but of mutual understanding between the two countries.”

The Greek Foreign Minister also referred to the two countries common history during WWII and the Battle of Crete connection. He stressed how 80 years after the Battle, Greece and Australia continue to defend the same principles and values of democracy and freedom.

“The Greeks, do not forget the sacrifices of Australia, of the Australians, on the battlefields of the two world wars,” Dendias said.

Strengthening multilateral cooperation:

During the talks, Dendias also had the opportunity to brief Minister Payne on issues in the Eastern Mediterranean and the destabilising role of Turkey in the region.

“I’m very pleased with the way Australia is dealing with the Law of the Sea and UNCLOS, because there is a broad consensus between us, as well as a consensus on the need to respect international law,” Dendias said.

The Greek Foreign Minister then stressed there is ground for improvement in economic relations between both countries, especially after “the significant Australian investment in Greece in [Greece’s] electricity distribution network.”

Investment opportunities in tourism, transport, energy, the green economy and manufacturing were also discussed.

“We agreed that our first meeting after ten years… will be the beginning of a series of close contacts between our two countries, a visit of the President of the Republic, a visit of the Prime Minister, our own meetings, also contacts of lawyers, of the scientists of the two ministries on the issues of Maritime Law and the evolution of UNCLOS,” Dendias concluded.

Role of Greek Australians in advancing bilateral relations:

In response to Dendias, the Australian Foreign Minister thanked him for welcoming her on her historic trip to Greece and focused on the strong relationship between both countries.

“I am very proud of our country’s diplomatic mission here. We really have close relations with Greece. They are two countries that share essential historical ties and a very close bond at the level of our peoples and common values,” Payne said.

“Our relationship has been further strengthened by the very large and active Greek community in Australia. It is a very vibrant community with a very significant contribution to the business sector, to investment, to culture. It is one of the largest expatriates in the world.”

Payne then stressed the historic ties between Greece and Australia through the presence of Australian soldiers in Greece during WWII, before acknowledging the “many events” held by the Greek community in Australia this year to mark the 200th anniversary of the Greek Revolution.

Lastly, she said Australia will continue to support the efforts for de-escalation in maritime areas based on International Law.

“We are strong advocates of international law and the institutions based on the United Nations Charter. Greece and Australia will continue to cooperate at the level of international organisations based on common principles and common interests,” she said, adding that Australia also supports strategic relations in the Indo-Pacific region.

Meeting with President Sakellaropoulou:

Minister Payne also met with the President of Greece, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, on Wednesday at the Presidential Mansion.

Payne with Sakellaropoulou.

During the meeting, Sakellaropoulou spoke of the active presence and participation of Greek Australians in the political, economic and social life of the country. She stressed that they acted as a stable bridge of communication between Greece and Australia.

There was also a special mention of the historic ties between the two countries, along with a series of issues, such as battling the pandemic, the situation in the Mediterranean and Indo-Pacific regions and the political, economic and cultural ties between Greece and Australia.

Given Payne’s dual ministerial capacity, as both foreign minister and minister for women, they also discussed the role and position of women in both countries and the initiatives to strengthen their rights.

Wreath to the Unknown Soldier:

During her visit to Greece, Minister Payne also paid tribute to the monument of the Unknown Soldier in Athens by laying a wreath.

Present at the wreath laying, which took place prior to Payne’s meeting with Dendias, was the Deputy Minister of National Defence, Nikolaos Hardalias, the Secretary of the Australian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Kathryn Campbell, the Ambassador of Australia to Greece, Arthur Spyrou and a delegation of diplomats of the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

During the ceremony, Payne recalled the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Crete, where troops from Australia, New Zealand and Great Britain “fought with great honour together with the Greek soldiers.”

She also pointed out that “this bond is honoured every year in Australia.”

Finally, she expressed her concern about the situation in Afghanistan and noted that Greece and Australia want to see a stable Afghanistan that will move away from extremism and support human rights, especially in terms of protecting women and girls.

At the conclusion of Payne’s visit to Greece, she will visit Austria and Belgium to meet with diplomats in those countries.

Fender Katsalidis’ Merdeka 118 building in Malaysia named world’s second tallest

Fender Katsalidis’ Merdeka 118 is set to become the world’s second tallest building upon its completion next year.

The firm said their priority was for the building to “enrich the social energy and cultural fabric of the city”.

“In addition, the achievement of creating the second-tallest building in the world celebrates the years of planning, problem-solving, collaboration and human endeavour required to realise a building of this complexity,” the firm’s cofounder Karl Fender said.

Fender cofounded the firm with Greek Australian architect Epaminondas ‘Nonda’ Katsalidis in 1996.

Nonda Katsalidis and Karl Fender of Fender Katsalidis (Photo: Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files)

READ MORE: Architect, Epaminondas Katsalidis, on being a pioneer in sustainable construction innovations

“Achieving this height milestone is a welcome bonus.”

The spire of the 118-storey skyscraper covers 3.1 million square feet and has topped out at over 2,227 feet above Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpur.

It stands higher than China’s 2,073-foot Shanghai Tower but is dwarfed by the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

Construction on the building will be completed in late 2022. 

Source: Architecture & Design

‘A dream come true’: Eleni Cassimatis to make Sydney Opera House debut

Eleni Cassimatis is a theatre, film, television, and voice actress who loves each medium equally.

“I fall in love with whatever I’m doing at the time,” Cassimatis tells the Greek Herald.

“I have a very big spot for Shakespeare, I love performing Shakespeare.” 

Cassimatis has performed in several Shakespeare plays, something that involves “delightful, nerdy digging” and text analysis.


“The stories are pretty epic. Once you let the words do the talking, it just becomes musical. There’s something contagious about it,” she says.


“Shakespeare was the first one to put pen to paper and capture what it means to be human.” 

Cassimatis first fell in love with acting in kindergarten as the daughter of a cafe owner in Orange.

“I always wanted to be an actor,” she says.

“It was always what I was planning on doing but being over in London and seeing shows (during my gap year in 2013), I was like, ‘I need to get back to Sydney.’”

“…it gave me the jolt into action to just go, ‘If I want this bad enough, I just need to work my butt off.’”

She hit the ground running by moving to Sydney in 2014 and taking up every acting course she could enter.

Two weeks ago, she was cast in her first mainstage theatre production as Player Queen, Osric, and Second Gravedigger in Bell Shakespeare’s production of Hamlet

Hamlet has been on hold since the beginning of 2020 due to COVID-19 restrictions. 

“They had about a week of shows and then the pandemic hit and the show got cancelled,” she says.”

“I got to watch the show two years ago before it got shut down.”

“Some of the cast members have already had an experience doing this show on stage and then some of us are new that have stepped into these roles.”

She says it presented a unique opportunity for the cast to be able to grow with their characters.

“Every time you have a life experience, that changes what you’re going to bring to a character, and going through two years of lockdown will only inform what everyone brings to these characters,” she says.

Eleni Cassimatis in ‘Icarus’ (by Mark Bolotin) (Photo: Supplied)

Hamlet is a play about longing, grief, losing ones you love and being separated versus being together.”

“All of that is going to be really interesting to explore.”

Cassimatis and her cast-mates will also play in Bell Shakespeare’s In A Nutshell, which debuts during her time in Hamlet. 

“We’ll be working on one show at night and working on another show during the day,” she says.

“It will be an interesting process and not something I’ve done before but nothing we can’t manage.”

She says playing three different characters in her debut at the Sydney Opera House will be “a huge” but “super exciting” challenge.

“It will be my first time (performing at the Opera House) and it is an absolute dream come true,” she says.

She says the biggest crowd she’s performed for was an outdoor audience of about 400 school students in Hong Kong.


“I just remember a sea of young people in front of us and then everyone piled out from their classrooms up the top to watch over the balcony too,” she says.

She describes the nerves she gets before a show as a muscle to be trained.

“It’s healthy, in a way. It’s your body’s way of preparing itself to go do the thing it needs to do,” she says. 

She also has two director’s credits under her belt, including a short film in 2015 she also starred in.

She sees lots more work in theatre, film, and television in her future.

“I would love to, one day, do some work in the (United) States but we’ve got so much on offer (here in Australia) at the moment,” she says.

The silver lining to an unpredictable two years of a pandemic, she says.

Stefanos Tsitsipas named to compete at ATP Cup in Sydney in January

Stefanos Tsitsipas will headline Team Greece at the ATP Cup in Sydney Olympic Park in January. 

The world No. 4 will lead the team, which includes his brother Petros, Michail Pervolarakis, Markos Kalovelonis, and Aristotelis Thanos.

Tsitsipas is among eighteen of the world’s top 20 men’s players set to contest the third instalment of the game. 

World No. 4 Novak Djokovic and Australia’s top-ranked player Alex de Minaur are among the other big names committed to play.

“The playing group enjoy representing their countries and to see 18 of the world’s top 20 players commit to the event is testament to that,” ATP Cup Tournament director Tom Larner said.

“The event shows off the passion the playing group have for this format and we look forward to welcoming all 16 teams to Sydney later this month.”

The competing ATP Cup nations are split into four groups, with Greece drawn to face Poland, Argentina, and Australia in Group D. 

Only the winner from each of the groups will progress.

The annual event is being held from January 1 to 9 and offers more than $14 million in prize money across the 16 countries.

St Basil’s inquest: Operators ask to be excused from giving evidence

A coronial inquest into Australia’s deadliest aged care COVID-19 outbreak at St Basil’s nursing home in Fawkner has taken a turn.

The home’s operators have asked the coroner to excuse them from giving evidence on the grounds they might incriminate themselves. 

Kon Kontis and Vicki Kos were due to give evidence next week into the deaths of 50 residents at the home last year.

That is until a barrister for the pair asked on Tuesday that they be excused on the grounds they might incriminate themselves.

It is expected the application will be opposed by families who lost loved ones in the outbreak.

Coroner John Cain will hear submissions from the interested parties before making a ruling.

(Photo: Daniel Pockett/AAP)

The inquest has already heard evidence St Basil’s management wasn’t happy with a state government decision to replace the entire staff with an agency workforce early in the outbreak.

Replacement worker Heleni Bagiartakis told the inquest she was surprised when Ms Kos said she wouldn’t accept phone calls regarding the clinical care of residents after she was stood down.

“I don’t recall the exact words,” Ms Bagiartakis told the inquest.

“The message though was, ‘It wasn’t our decision, we don’t agree with the decision, therefore it’s not our problem’.”

John Atzarakis’ 77-year-old mother Fotini, who was only meant to stay at St Basil’s for a fortnight of respite care, died in the outbreak.

He says management owes the community an explanation.

“If people are allowed to be excused, we’re going to get half the story and we’re going to get a select story and that’s not what a coronial inquest is about,” he said.

John Atzarakis says families are still navigating trauma and grief as the coroner investigates last year’s deadly outbreak (Photo: ABC News/Joseph Dunstan)

Mr Atzarakis said his 83-year-old father was struggling with the loss of his life partner.

“He’s not coping with it, he takes all the blame,” he said.

Mr Atzarakis said it was “shameful” that the operators of the home were trying to avoid what he believed was their responsibility to give evidence.

“These people [the residents] were elderly, these people were weak, they were at the mercy of the staff and management,” he said.

“The staff and management were accountable for their lives, they need to take ownership.

“I lost my mother because of that. And they owe everyone an explanation.”

Spiro Vasilakis lost his elderly mother, Maria, in the COVID outbreak at St Basil’s (Photo: ABC News/James Hancock)

Spiro Vasilakis, whose 81-year-old mother Maria died during the outbreak, said he wanted to hear directly from those who ran St Basil’s.

“The families would be outraged, absolutely outraged, that they have not got the decency and the honesty to front up and face the questioning,” he said.

”Give us your story, from your mouth.”

The five-week coronial inquest will continue hearing from dozens of witnesses, including nurses and centre managers.

Source: ABC News

Thanasi Kokkinakis up for ATP Comeback Player of the Year award

Thanasi Kokkinakis has been announced as a nominee for Comeback Player of the Year at this year’s ATP awards. 

The award is nominated for players who have bounced back from an injury to become one of the top players on tour, the ATP said.

“Every injury is a massive setback,” Kokkinakis said.

“It’s [about] just trying to build yourself up again and keep going.” 

“That sort of stuff takes a toll and a lot of people don’t realise that unless they’ve been in that sort of position.”

Kokkinakis went on hiatus last year as he dealt with a right shoulder injury.

“I’m fortunate to be playing again and try not to take it for granted.”

Kokkinakis, 25, recently made the Challenger finals in Romania, bumping his ranking to no. 171 in the FedEx ATP Rankings this year.

He’s joined by fellow nominees Mackenzie McDonald, Andy Murray, and Jack Sock, who up for the award.

The winner will be announced later this month.

Source: ATP Tour

Nikos Androulakis leads in first voting round for KINAL leadership

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Nikos Androulakis looks likely to snatch the Movement for Change (KINAL) party’s top job.

The European Parliament lawmaker attracted 36.88% percent of the more than 98,000 first-round votes for KINAL leader on Sunday. 

Androulakis won in 11 of the 13 regions, including winning 61.38 percent of the vote in his hometown Crete.

Former prime minister George Papandreou followed behind Androulakis, receiving 27.97 percent, or 74,093, of votes.

He won in the region of Western Greece and was particularly popular in the votes among diasporic Greeks.

Former education minister Andreas Loverdos failed to qualify for the second round of voting, winning 25.95 percent of votes.

He won in the region of Attica.

Loverdos told Skai TV he would announce his support for either of the remaining candidates by Tuesday.

The second round of voting is planned for December 12. 

Source: Ekathimerini

Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne to meet Greek counterpart in Athens today

As The Greek Herald first announced in November 26, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne has arrived in Athens and is set to meet with Greek counterpart, Nikos Dendias. 

The discussions, expected to be held on Wednesday December 8, at 12pm (Greek time) will focus on the strengthening of bilateral cooperation, on the coordination between the two countries in International Organizations, on developments in Greece’s broader neighbourhood and in the Indo-Pacific region, as well as on the Greek Diaspora in Australia as a link between the two states.

According to The Greek Herald‘s sources, Ministers Payne and Dendias will also discuss the double taxation agreement between both countries which is expected to be finalised by 2022.

The extended talks will be followed by joint statements later in the afternoon. 

Earlier this year, Minister Payne held her first telephone conversation with Greece’s Foreign Minister, Nikos Dendias. The talks held in October between the two top officials focused on their shared commitment to the International Law of the Sea, to the protection of the environment and to regional developments. 

After her visit in Athens, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne will meet with EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell in Brussels. 

Greece strengthens cooperation with Israel, Cyprus

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Greece has agreed to strengthen its cooperation with Israel and Cyprus at the eighth trilateral summit in Jerusalem on Tuesday.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Israel’s Naftali Bennett, and Cyprus’ Nikos Anastasiades confirmed the cooperation in a joint statement.

“Israel, Greece, and Cyprus view the energy sector, and in particular, natural gas and renewable energy, as a solid foundation for cooperation in the region, based on international law…,” the leaders say.

They also noted their respect for each to exercise their respective sovereign rights.

“The ongoing turmoil in our region has triggered unprecedented migratory flows that pose challenges and can only be met by multilateral, multifaceted action,” they said.

“We express the importance of respecting sovereignty and sovereign rights in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean Sea and to preserve the stability in this region.”

The leaders also reaffirmed plans to connect their countries with a 2,000-megawatt undersea electricity cable. 

The leaders signed an agreement to speed up the construction of the EuroAsia Interconnector (EAI) project in March. 

All three say they remain committed to their cooperation with the US under the 3 + 1 scheme. 

They also reiterated their “full and unwavering support” to settling the Cyprus problem – an everlasting dispute between Cyprus and Turkey including over territorial rights in the Aegean Sea and energy exploration rights in the eastern Mediterranean. 

The next trilateral summit will be held in Cyprus in the latter half of 2022. 

Source: Ekathimerini

Hellsoc UNSW raise money for Heartbeat of Football with annual soccer event

The Hellenic Society of the University of New South Wales (Hellsoc UNSW) held their annual ‘Hellsoccer Day’ on Saturday and raised over $500 for the Heartbeat of Football foundation.

Over 70 people attended the annual event which saw seven soccer teams, made up of university students, play against each other for a chance to make the grand final.

In the end, players from team ‘3rd Times the Charm’ came out victorious against the Sydney University Greek Society (SUGS) team and claimed the Vageli Siaflas Shield.

The Shield has been named in honour of beloved Hellsocian, Vageli Siaflas, who tragically passed away in 2009 but will always be remembered for his love of soccer.

Throughout the day, spectators and players were also treated to a traditional Greek barbeque of souvlakia and Greek music was on repeat.

Souvlakia were on offer on Hellsoccer Day. Photo supplied.

Peter Kougias from the Heartbeat of Football foundation was among the crowd and thanked Hellsoc UNSW for their generous donation, which would go towards installing working defibrillators on soccer fields all around Sydney.

The President of Hellsoc UNSW, Antigone Sarlas, told The Greek Herald after the event that everything “exceeded” her expectations on the day.

“The fact we could do it all to give back is what the day is all about!” she concluded.

The committee of Hellsoc UNSW with Peter Kougias from the Heartbeat of Football foundation.