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‘One of the greatest honours in football’: Ange Postecoglou confirmed as new Celtic manager

Ange Postecoglou has been officially confirmed as the new manager of Celtic, a role he has described as one of the greatest honours in world football.

The former Socceroos boss was first linked with the position two weeks ago and on Thursday was finally unveiled via Zoom from Japan, where he will leave in the coming days for his new home in Glasgow.

It is easily the highest-profile coaching move ever made by an Australian and throws Postecoglou into the middle of one of sport’s greatest rivalries – the Old Firm derby against Rangers.

READ MORE: Postecoglou: A-League has chance to reset and prioritise football again.

Postecoglou has signed a 12-month rolling contract with the 51-time Scottish Premiership winners, and was hailed by the club in a statement as a “modern, progressive coach with exciting, attacking football as his philosophy.”

“He is someone I believe has the coaching and managerial credentials to be a real success at Celtic and we are already working closely together on our plans for the season and seasons ahead,” incoming Celtic Chief Executive, Dominic McKay, said in a media release.

For his part, Postecoglou vowed in a statement to return Celtic to the top of Scottish football.

READ MORE: Greek migrant community’s impact on Australian football charted in documentary series.

“The opportunity that has been given to me is one of the greatest honours in football and the responsibility to lead our magnificent football club into the future is one that I will cherish dearly,” Postecoglou said.

“Celtic is one of THE names in world football, of that there is no doubt – a giant of a club, a proper footballing institution and so much more – real history, real substance, real authenticity and real soul.

“I will be doing everything I can to get our great club back on top and, at the same time, deliver the kind of football which our fans appreciate. We want to entertain our fans and we want to win, these are the objectives which I always set myself and which I now begin work on.”

Postecoglou is easily Australia’s most decorated football coach, having won two titles in the old National Soccer League with South Melbourne, two in the A-League with Brisbane Roar – including a record 36-match unbeaten streak – another crown in Japan’s J.League with Yokohama F. Marinos, and famously guided Australia to the 2015 Asian Cup.

READ MORE: Kosta Barbarouses thanks Ange Postecoglou for ‘setting up’ his successful football career.

‘Abuse of cultural heritage’: Greeks outraged at concreting of the Acropolis

A new concrete pathway to facilitate wheelchair access to the Acropolis in Athens has continued to fuel a row between authorities aiming to broaden access to Greece’s most famous ancient monuments and critics who say it ruins the classical harmony of the site.

Greek opposition leader, Alexis Tsipras, demanded recently that the conservative government “stop abusing our cultural heritage,” saying the changes would amount to “changing the landscape” of a world heritage site.

But Culture Minister, Lina Mendoni, defended the development, which was approved by the Central Archaeological Council (KAS), the body which oversees the Acropolis complex that includes the Parthenon, a 5th century BC temple to the goddess Athena.

READ MORE: ‘Just a way to fit more tourists’: Archaeologists outraged at planned renovation of Acropolis.

People walk on a new cement walkway to improve access for people with disabilities as they visit the Parthenon temple. Photo: Reuters / Alkis Konstantinidis.

“I have seen people in wheelchairs who came up for the first time and felt happy,” Mendoni told reporters during a visit to the site on Tuesday.

“I think this is something that should also make us particularly happy because to give joy to people is perhaps just as significant as the protection of our cultural goods.”

Prior to the pandemic, about 3.5 million tourists made the ascent to see the Acropolis, the country’s most visited site.

In the six months that the temples were closed to the public on account of COVID-19, a new lift capable of carrying two wheelchairs at a time was also installed on the rock’s northern flank, replacing an older elevator that had ceased to operate years ago. That, too, has been criticised as a modernist eyesore.

READ MORE: Greek PM inaugurates new disabled-friendly pathways and lifts for Acropolis Hill.

A new cement walkway next to the Parthenon temple is built to facilitate wheelchair access. Photo: Reuters / Alkis Konstantinidis.

Architect and current head of the Acropolis Monuments Conservation committee, Manolis Korres, even has plans to overhaul the ancient citadel’s majestic gateway, or Propylaia.

According to The Guardian, Korres hopes to reinstate a Roman staircase that would both broaden the entrance, correct previous erroneous interventions and return it to some of its original form.

In response to these alterations, more than 3,500 signatories have endorsed an open letter on the online activist network Avaaz calling for the pathways to be removed and other projected changes to be cancelled.

READ MORE: Greece’s Culture Ministry slammed for laying cement on sections of the Acropolis.

A man steps off a new cement walkway next to the Parthenon temple, built to improve access for people with disabilities atop the Acropolis hill, in Athens, Greece, June 8, 2021. Photo: Reuters / Alkis Konstantinidis.

Dr Tasos Tanoulas, until recently director of restorations at the Propylaia, also deplored the decision to cover so much of the rock’s face with reinforced concrete. He told The Guardian the move would lead inexorably to “degradation of the natural landscape and a devaluation of the rock as a natural monument in its own right, as a natural fort.”

But the changes have also won praise, and according to Korres, have the added advantage of being ‘reversible.’ The new walkway, a grey concrete track, is laid over a synthetic membrane that protects the ancient stones underneath and permits easy removal.

Tour guides also gathered around the monument’s ticket booths on Wednesday and agreed the new pathways were overdue.

A woman poses for a photo on a new cement walkway next to the Parthenon temple in Athens, Greece, June 8, 2021. Photo: Reuters / Alkis Konstantinidis.

“There are ambulances up here at least four times a week,” Athina Pitaki, who has been guiding visitors around the site since 1978, told The Guardian.

“I’ve been up here long enough to see all the changes and in reality it’s much better now. It hasn’t affected the monuments. They’re still as impressive as ever and for the first time people can enjoy them without always fearing they’re about to fall.”

Only time will tell what the final outcome of this raging debate will be.

Source: The Guardian.

Maria Sakkari loses 3-hour semi-final thriller at the French Open, still makes Greeks proud

Unseeded Czech, Barbora Krejcikova, pulled off a titanic victory to reach her first Grand Slam singles final at Roland Garros on Thursday, outlasting No.17 seed Maria Sakkari 7-5, 4-6, 9-7 in a three-hour and 18-minute epic.

Krejcikova, now on an 11-match winning streak, saved a match point at 5-3 in the third set with a flying backhand winner, then needed five match points spanning two games before quelling the challenge from the Greek player and improving to 3-0 in their head-to-head rivalry.

Against Sakkari, Krejcikova used a variety of speeds on her groundstrokes to pull her through the challenging tilt, from off-speed slices to blistering backhands down the line. When all was said and done, very little separated the pairing, with Krejcikova the overall aggressor by a hair, having four more winners and five more unforced errors than Sakkari.

After falling behind a break two times in the opening three games of the match, Krejcikova used her mettle to turn around the opening frame. From 1-3 down, Krejcikova won four games in a row, ending that run with a stellar lob on break point for a 5-3 lead.

Sakkari pressured the Czech’s serve to break at love in the next game, pulling back on serve. But Krejcikova came through with aplomb in the final stretch of the set, using her forehand and serve to power to a love hold for 6-5, then breaking an error-prone Sakkari to grasp the one-set lead.

A streaky second set started with Sakkari reeling off four games in a row, using her exceptional speed and tenacity to force errors from Krejcikova. The Czech made a late charge to 4-3, and slammed two aces at 5-3 to hold on and force Sakkari to serve for the set.

Sakkari had to steel herself in a tough game, missing chances on her first two set points. But a long Krejcikova miscue gave Sakkari a third opportunity, and that one was the charm when the Greek pulled Krejcikova into the net, then blasted a crosscourt backhand to force an errant volley.

In the decider, an early break at 1-1 went Sakkari’s way, and she held onto that advantage for quite some time, using down-the-line backhand winners of her own to hold for 5-3. In that very game, Sakkari reached match point after a forehand miscue by Krejcikova, but Krejcikova charged forward to knock a backhand winner out of the air, and the Czech held on from there.

That would prove to be Sakkari’s sole match point as she was unable to hold while serving for the match at 5-4, and rallies became lengthier and more angular as the pair went deeper into the third set, with no tiebreak in sight.

At 7-6, Krejcikova garnered her first three match points, but strong serving and determined speed bailed Sakkari out on each occasion. But Krejcikova grasped two more match points in a scintillating 8-7 game, and after a number of back-and-forth rallies where each woman went for the lines with gusto, it would be the Czech who closed out the match with one final backhand winner.

25-year-old Krejcikova will next play fellow first-time major finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, after the No.31 seed from Russia defeated Slovenia’s Tamara Zidansek in the earlier semifinal.

Source: WTA.

Official launch of the Darwin GleNTi festival held at NT Parliament House

The Darwin GleNTi is set to kick off this weekend at Bicentennial Park, Darwin Esplanade, and to mark the occasion, the Northern Territory Government held an official launch event on Wednesday night.

Held at the NT Parliament House, there were over 150 people in attendance including NT Chief Minister, Michael Gunner, the President of the Greek Orthodox Community of Northern Australia, Nicholas Poniris, the Honorary Consul General of Greece in Darwin, John Anictomatis, and many other prominent members of the local Greek community.

READ MORE: ‘Taste of GleNTi’ kicks off a big week of Greek festivities in Darwin.

Mr Poniris, who was emcee on the night, gave a small speech on the significance of Darwin’s Greek community and the bicentenary of the Greek Revolution this year. This was followed by short yet informative speeches from both Mr Gunner and Mr Anictomatis.

After attendees had enjoyed some canapes and free drinks, they moved on to the Darwin Entertainment Centre for a special concert by Dimitris Basis.

READ MORE: Hellenic AC crowned the winners of Darwin’s inaugural GleNTi Cup.

“It was a lovely show. People were dancing and singing in their seats,” Mr Poniris tells The Greek Herald.

The Darwin GleNTi will be held this weekend on June 12-13.

Operation Ironside: Greek Australians among those charged in NSW police bust

So far 55 people from New South Wales have been arrested in the major police sting Operation Ironside. They have been hit with a range of charges, including having a Lamborghini bought with the proceeds of crime, drug trafficking, money laundering and participating in a criminal organisation.

Among those 55 are two Greek Australians – Emmanuel Vamvoukakis and Luke Andreou.

READ MORE: Angelo Pandeli named in Australian cartel responsible for $1.5 billion drug imports.

Luke Andreou:

Luke Andreou, 31, was arrested by the AFP as part of Operation Ironside raids on Sunday. Picture: Facebook / The Daily Telegraph.

The 31-year-old from Horsley Park has been charged with money-laundering offences, and possessing drugs and firearms.

Emmanuel Vamvoukakis:

The high-ranking Comanchero bikie was arrested on Sunday after the National Anti Gangs Squad allegedly busted him trying to import cocaine from Greece.

READ MORE: AFP raids Emmanuel Vamvoukakis’ home over alleged plot to import cocaine from Greece.

(R) Operation Ironside: Police at one of many raids around the country. Picture: The Daily Telegraph.

According to The Daily Telegraph, Mr Vamvoukakis — who police say is the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Comanchero South Coast chapter — was charged with four offences.

This includes: import marketable quantity of border controlled drug; deal with proceeds of crime; direct activities to aid or risk aiding a criminal organisation and; intend as instrument of crime money or property worth $50,000 or more.

Vamvoukakis did not apply for bail and it was officially refused in Wollongong Local Court.

Full story: The Daily Telegraph.

READ MORE: Operation Ironside: Greek Australians among those arrested in SA.

Jordan Gogos makes his mark on the Australian fashion scene

Jordan Gogos’ debut fashion show at Australian Fashion Week attracted local celebrities, social media influencers and well-known stylists from across the nation and we’re not surprised.

Despite the rainy weather outside Sydney’s Carriageworks, where Fashion Week was being held, Gogos’ show treated guests to flashes of bright colour and towering painted objects propped up monolithically on the runway.

Gogos founded ‘Iordanes Spyridon Gogos’ in 2019 as a conduit for community-making and co-design.

According to Marie Claire, Gogos’ fashion designs seek to explore notions of gender fluidity and sustainability with a contemporary practice-led approach. And that’s exactly what his fashion show had on display.

Jordan Gogos at his debut fashion show. Photo: Getty Images.

Working closely with 25 different artists and brands, Gogos created technicolour patchworked coats, corseted strapless dresses and silky suiting. All were made from using deadstock materials, and items sourced from the community centre Reverse Garbage, which encourages reuse of materials in order to reduce waste.

“A lot of the pieces are quite size inclusive, because we’ve done a lot of corseting which could fit the skinniest person for the largest of persons,” Gogos told Marie Claire.

It’s no surprise then that the models Gogos selected to walk down the runway at his debut fashion show were also of all genders and different body sizes.

The fashion show featured models of all genders and sizes. Photo: Getty Images.

“The people on this runway are not usually on runways,” Gogos noted of the models, which were a mix of friends, collaborators and people who he met as recently as three weeks ago after reaching out to express their admiration.

“[This show] represents what Sydney is, what we actually are, who we actually engage with and who is in fashion and who are the people walking on the street.”

With such an innovative and inclusive approach to fashion, we can’t wait to see what Gogos has in store next for the Australian fashion industry.

Source: Marie Claire.

Chris Kriketos’ cafe in Sydney’s The Rocks left in limbo by public agencies

Traders in Sydney’s once-thriving The Rocks precinct have been left in limbo as it deals with tough times and a hodgepodge of initiatives.

Chris Kriketos is one of these traders.

Mr Kriketos was told that his family business, Bakers Oven Cafe, would have to go to public tender to renew its lease with Placemaking NSW after almost 40 years in the district.

This happened at the same time the cafe was dealing with revenues falling 60 percent due to the COVID-19 pandemic, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Sydney’s The Rocks precinct has been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

A key issue for many businesses in The Rocks is the ownership of property in the district – much of which is leasehold and owned by the NSW state government.

Placemaking NSW is a state government advisory committee formed last year to provide “strategic advice” on the management of precincts like The Rocks and Darling Harbour.

But Mr Kriketos told The Daily Telegraph that renegotiating the lease with Placemaking NSW for his family’s cafe was just another hurdle after a stressful year.

A key issue for many businesses in The Rocks is the ownership of property in the district.

“We’ve had so much stress over the last two years going through this Covid storm… This is just another hurdle thrown in front of us,” Mr Kriketos told the media outlet.

Mr Kriketos said the family business, started by his father, was concerned about a lack of tenure and hadn’t yet decided what to do.

“We want a longer lease tenure, another 5-15 years, but they’re offering nothing and saying the space has got to go up for tender,” he concluded.

Only time will tell what the final outcome for this much-loved family business will be.

Source: The Daily Telegraph.

Greeks of Egypt and Middle East Society of SA celebrates 70th Anniversary

With a special event held at the Club’s premises in Keswick, Adelaide last Sunday, members and friends of the Greeks of Egypt and Middle East Society of SA (GEMES) celebrated the 70th Anniversary from the founding of the Society.

In her opening speech, President Renata Irene Papaioannou welcomed the attendees and acknowledged the Society’s founding members for their wisdom and forward thinking.

“On this special day, would you allow me to firstly pay my respect and gratitude to the founding members of our Society for giving us the chance to be part of and serve in one of the finest and most traditional institutions in existence that being no other than our Society, The Greeks of Egypt and Middle East Society of South Australia Inc, a Society build with sweat, blood and tears, and I congratulate all past and present committees, members, sponsors and donors that have helped to create, and establish the prided and tradition, that we have before us today.

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“From the humble beginning, our Society has grown to an organisation known in the South Australian Greek Community not only for our social activities, but also for our historical artistic, sporting and charitable work,” said Ms Papaioannou. 

GEMES was founded in 1951 by George Perdikis, Constantine Karavis, Emanuel Coutsoumis, Leonidas Psorakis, Constantane Giamanis, Michael Giamanis, John Kalimospoulos and Ariatos Spyridon.

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“Let’s aim to be present for the 80th anniversary of the club,” Ms Papaionannou said and expressed her gratitude to the Executive Committee and the volunteers.

Present at the event were: David Pisoni MP, Minister for Innovation & Skills and representing the Premier of South Australia; George Pslachas, Consul General of Greece in Adelaide; Tom Koutsantonis MP, Member of West Torrens and representing, The Leader of the Opposition, the Honourable Peter Malinaukas; Steve Georganas MP, Federal Member for Adelaide; Michael Coxon, Mayor of the City of West Torrens; Adrianna Christopoulos-from SA Multicultural & Ethnic Affairs Commission and Bill Gonis OAM- President of the Greek Orthodox Community of SA.

Remembering the victims of the Distomo massacre

Regarded as one of the most heinous crimes committed by the Nazis in occupied Greece, 228 residents (114 women and 104 men) were executed inhumanely in the Greek town of Distomo on June 10, 1944.

After suffering a defeat to the Greeks at Katavothra, leaving 15 German soldiers dead and as many wounded, the Germans took revenge on the innocent residents of Distomo.

Ordered by German Lieutenant Hans Zambel, Distomo was set on fire and 218 residents were executed, including 45 children and 20 infants.

According to survivors, SS forces “bayoneted babies in their cribs, stabbed pregnant women, and beheaded the village priest.”

The barbaric brutality received international outcry at the time, yet the German administration in Athens blamed the residents of Distomo for not complying with military orders.

Following the Germans’ withdrawal from Greece, the Greek War Crimes Bureau was able to find and arrest Zambel, who had taken refuge in Paris.

In August 1949, he confessed to the extent of the German atrocities in Distomo.

A film about the tragic massacre, titled ‘A Song For Argyrishas’, has since been made and follows the perspective of four-year-old survivor Argyris Sfountouris.

Kiki Efthimiou and his neighbour knock back $50 million offer on their homes from developer

Two Rose Bay homeowners, who teamed up to sell their properties, have knocked back an offer of $50 million from an apartment developer.

According to realestate.com.au, retired barrister Richard Burbridge QC bought 19 Conway Avenue (1215 sqm) for $3.03 million in 1981, and retired businessman Kiki Efthimiou OAM and his wife, Froso, bought 17 Ian Street (1279 sqm) for $140,000 in 1974.

Burbridge famously founded State Chambers (with Richard Kenzie AM QC) in 1997 and Efthimiou owned Australia’s largest import company of Greek products until 2013.

Kiki Efthimiou (left) bought the property with his wife for $140,000 in 1974.

READ MORE: Kiki Efthimiou: We need a collective effort to defend the name ‘Greek Yoghurt’ in Australia.

The two great mates have listed their properties with Sotheby’s principal, Michael Pallier, and colleague, Francis Egan, in conjunction with Ben Hunter and Ben Stewart of CBRE.

Although the highly-anticipated expressions of interest period for the homes will be launched online this Friday, realestate.com.au reports the retirees have already turned down a $50 million offer.

An aerial view of 17 Ian Street and 19 Conway Avenue, Rose Bay. Photo: realestate.com.au.

“They felt it was worth a lot more,” Mr Pallier told Australian media.

Hailed as the best site in Sydney, the properties have stunning Sydney Harbour views and are a short stroll from Rose Bay Village and the ferry wharf.

“It’s probably the best development and home site in the east — you can do units or it could be a trophy homebuyer,” Mr Pallier told realestate.com.au.

“I haven’t seen anything as special as this.”

Source: realestate.com.au