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- 17 март 2005
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Откако го примија со тестиси, политичките водачи на Грција почнаа отворено да ги навредуваат народите и државите во Европската Унија.
Во насловот на темава е цитат од шефот на државата им, Карлос Папуљас.
Не остана незабележан.
Лидерот на Нова Демократија и архитектот на анти-македонската политика на јужните, Антонис Самарас, од тврд противник на барањата на ЕУ, сега е станат помек од памук.
Детали - Грција е ставена во квази-колонијален статус:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...y-while-leaders-haggle-over-deal-6989029.html
И уште не им одобруваат втор пакет мерки за помош, и сега пак им бараат додатни услови. А Европската Централна Банка ги префрла грчките обврзници за да се заштити себе си.
Но тоа не е се'. Кога Германците (и другите) разбраа дека циганштанаава им го пали знамето, дека се занесува ќе добие репарации од Втората светска војна, и отворено го навредува германскиот и другите народи и држави, се јавија некои од водачите на најголемите германски корпорации со отворен повик да се истера Грција од еврозоната и од ЕУ!
Непишано правило е германските индустријалци да молчат пред тоа што јавно го кажува канцаларот (Ангела Меркел во случајов). Но сега ја прекршуваат традицијата и отворено се јавуваат со мислења државата да ги исшутира грчките паразити.
Шефот на Австриската Стопанска Комора пак им држи лекција на јужниве да ги продадат островите на Турција и им вели тоа е цената на помошта!
)) За оние што не знаат, Австријците традиционално не можат да ги смислат јужниве.
Долго време немам видено/чуено ваков јазик и тон!
Greece to face further demands before it can get its second bailout; - ECB swaps Greek bonds to protect itself from a forced Greek default.
Eurozone leaders are scrambling to finalise the second Greek bailout package in time for eurozone finance ministers meeting on Monday.
The package is likely to include increased oversight and monitoring on the ground in Greece, along with a proposal for bailout funds to be paid into an escrow account focused on funding Greek debt repayments.
Plans to delay some or all of the bailout funds until after elections have been dropped, while the eurozone may also reduce the interest rate charged on loans to Greece. However, a deal is far from assured since the package will also contain a list of 24 demands which Greece must meet in the next month.This comes despite New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras claiming yesterday that “Greece has done what it had to do.”
Additionally under the plan Greek debt will only reach 128% of GDP in 2020, above the target of 120%, meaning the IMF may still not sign off on the proposal. FTD reports that this may also lead to calls for an increase in the size of the second bailout.
Meanwhile, some members of eurozone governments are preparing for the possibility of a Greek default. Finnish Europe Minister Alexander Stubb said yesterday, “I am not advocating a Greek default, hard or soft, but I’m not excluding the possibility of it if the Greeks don’t get their acts together.”
Open Europe’s briefing on the ten unanswered questions surrounding the Greek bailout was featured in the Telegraph, Business Insider, National Review Online and on the Telegraph live blog. Open Europe Director Mats Persson blog on the Greek default was published by the Irish Independent. Open Europe’s Raoul Ruparel appeared on RTE Drive Time discussing the prospects of a Greek exit from the eurozone.
Die Welt reported yesterday that the ECB is planning to swap its holdings of Greek debt for new bonds, which would allow Greece to introduce collective action clauses into its bonds, while protecting the ECB from potential losses. The FT reports that the Bundesbank objected to the move, wary of the precedent it would set for special treatment of ECB bond holdings.
Greek Development Minister Michalis Chrysochoidis, of the PASOK party controversially proposed delaying elections and extending the mandate of Luca Papademos’ technocratic government until 2013. A new poll published by Epikaira magazine highlights the rise of the extreme parties in Greece, as three far-left parties gain 43.5% of the vote combined. The poll puts New Democracy on 27.5% and PASOK on just 11%.
There was an unexpectedly large jump in unemployment in Portugal from 12.4% to 14% in the last quarter of 2011. The ECB yesterday forecast that the eurozone economy would contract by 0.1% this year, and grow by just 1.1% in 2013 – both worse than previous predictions.
FT CityAM WSJ Times Monde Guardian EUobserver El País Kathimerini Irish Independent Telegraph Irish Times FT 2 WSJ 2 Irish Times 2 WSJ 3 Les Echos Les Echos 2 Irish Independent 2 Mail Les Echos La Tribune Coulisses de Bruxelles: Liberation Kathimerini 2 Kathimerini 3 Epikaira Jornal de Negocios Welt WSJ 4 La Tribune FT 4 CityAM 2 BBC FTD FAZ Handelsblatt Reuters Irish Independent: Persson IHT: Papahelas Economist: Leader Economist Economist BBC: Flanders FT: Tett FT Editorial FT: Bini Smaghi FT: Peel CityAM: Kelly WSJ: Fidler WSJ Heard on the Street Times: King Telegraph: Reece Telegraph: Evans-Pritchard Telegraph Handelsblatt: Brüderle
Во насловот на темава е цитат од шефот на државата им, Карлос Папуљас.
Не остана незабележан.
Лидерот на Нова Демократија и архитектот на анти-македонската политика на јужните, Антонис Самарас, од тврд противник на барањата на ЕУ, сега е станат помек од памук.
Детали - Грција е ставена во квази-колонијален статус:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...y-while-leaders-haggle-over-deal-6989029.html
И уште не им одобруваат втор пакет мерки за помош, и сега пак им бараат додатни услови. А Европската Централна Банка ги префрла грчките обврзници за да се заштити себе си.
Но тоа не е се'. Кога Германците (и другите) разбраа дека циганштанаава им го пали знамето, дека се занесува ќе добие репарации од Втората светска војна, и отворено го навредува германскиот и другите народи и држави, се јавија некои од водачите на најголемите германски корпорации со отворен повик да се истера Грција од еврозоната и од ЕУ!
Непишано правило е германските индустријалци да молчат пред тоа што јавно го кажува канцаларот (Ангела Меркел во случајов). Но сега ја прекршуваат традицијата и отворено се јавуваат со мислења државата да ги исшутира грчките паразити.
Шефот на Австриската Стопанска Комора пак им држи лекција на јужниве да ги продадат островите на Турција и им вели тоа е цената на помошта!

Долго време немам видено/чуено ваков јазик и тон!
Greece to face further demands before it can get its second bailout; - ECB swaps Greek bonds to protect itself from a forced Greek default.
Eurozone leaders are scrambling to finalise the second Greek bailout package in time for eurozone finance ministers meeting on Monday.
The package is likely to include increased oversight and monitoring on the ground in Greece, along with a proposal for bailout funds to be paid into an escrow account focused on funding Greek debt repayments.
Plans to delay some or all of the bailout funds until after elections have been dropped, while the eurozone may also reduce the interest rate charged on loans to Greece. However, a deal is far from assured since the package will also contain a list of 24 demands which Greece must meet in the next month.This comes despite New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras claiming yesterday that “Greece has done what it had to do.”
Additionally under the plan Greek debt will only reach 128% of GDP in 2020, above the target of 120%, meaning the IMF may still not sign off on the proposal. FTD reports that this may also lead to calls for an increase in the size of the second bailout.
Meanwhile, some members of eurozone governments are preparing for the possibility of a Greek default. Finnish Europe Minister Alexander Stubb said yesterday, “I am not advocating a Greek default, hard or soft, but I’m not excluding the possibility of it if the Greeks don’t get their acts together.”
Open Europe’s briefing on the ten unanswered questions surrounding the Greek bailout was featured in the Telegraph, Business Insider, National Review Online and on the Telegraph live blog. Open Europe Director Mats Persson blog on the Greek default was published by the Irish Independent. Open Europe’s Raoul Ruparel appeared on RTE Drive Time discussing the prospects of a Greek exit from the eurozone.
Die Welt reported yesterday that the ECB is planning to swap its holdings of Greek debt for new bonds, which would allow Greece to introduce collective action clauses into its bonds, while protecting the ECB from potential losses. The FT reports that the Bundesbank objected to the move, wary of the precedent it would set for special treatment of ECB bond holdings.
Greek Development Minister Michalis Chrysochoidis, of the PASOK party controversially proposed delaying elections and extending the mandate of Luca Papademos’ technocratic government until 2013. A new poll published by Epikaira magazine highlights the rise of the extreme parties in Greece, as three far-left parties gain 43.5% of the vote combined. The poll puts New Democracy on 27.5% and PASOK on just 11%.
There was an unexpectedly large jump in unemployment in Portugal from 12.4% to 14% in the last quarter of 2011. The ECB yesterday forecast that the eurozone economy would contract by 0.1% this year, and grow by just 1.1% in 2013 – both worse than previous predictions.
FT CityAM WSJ Times Monde Guardian EUobserver El País Kathimerini Irish Independent Telegraph Irish Times FT 2 WSJ 2 Irish Times 2 WSJ 3 Les Echos Les Echos 2 Irish Independent 2 Mail Les Echos La Tribune Coulisses de Bruxelles: Liberation Kathimerini 2 Kathimerini 3 Epikaira Jornal de Negocios Welt WSJ 4 La Tribune FT 4 CityAM 2 BBC FTD FAZ Handelsblatt Reuters Irish Independent: Persson IHT: Papahelas Economist: Leader Economist Economist BBC: Flanders FT: Tett FT Editorial FT: Bini Smaghi FT: Peel CityAM: Kelly WSJ: Fidler WSJ Heard on the Street Times: King Telegraph: Reece Telegraph: Evans-Pritchard Telegraph Handelsblatt: Brüderle