Saturday, October 12, 2013

Greece news updates October 12 , 2013 - 6.4 Earthquake detected west of Crete , Latest news regarding Greece Troika talks , SDOE to go attack Golden Dawn funding sources , Greece reduction of heating tax rejected by Troika......

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An earthquake of 6.4 magnitude was detected in the Mediterranean Sea west of the island of Crete on Saturday, but there were no reports of casualties or damage, the Greek police and fire brigade said.
The centre of the quake, which struck at at 1311 GMT, was 22.5 miles (40 km) below the seabed 43 miles (70 km) west of Chania on Crete, the U.S. Geological Survey said. Greece is often rocked by earthquakes. Most cause no serious damage but a 5.9 magnitude quake in 1999 killed 143 people.
REUTERS



Gov't to propose new bond issue to troika to cover funding gap

As the government comes under increasing pressure – from the political opposition and from its own ranks – to ease off on an ongoing austerity drive, Finance Ministry officials have reportedly proposed to troika representatives a way of covering an anticipated funding gap for next year of 4.4 billion euros in a bid to postpone talk about further measures.
According to the proposal as Kathimerini understands it, some 4.4 billion euros in bonds that were issued in 2009 as a capital boost for Greek banks and are to mature next May would be replaced by new bonds. Such a move would cover an estimated funding gap for next year and, Greek officials hope, would postpone until spring any discussion about the sustainability of Greece’s debt and the possible need for new austerity measures for 2015 and 2016.
Sources indicate that the proposal involving the new bonds is likely to meet with objections from the European Commission and European Central Bank – which together with the International Monetary Fund have granted Greece two rescue programs since 2010. Greek officials are said to be hopeful, however, that they can win round troika envoys who are due to return to Athens at the end of this month.
With local authority elections and European Parliament elections looming next May, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is keen to avoid imposing any more pain on austerity-weary Greeks. He, and other government officials, are expected to impress upon troika auditors the risks of increasing taxes or cutting the incomes of Greeks as social and political tensions continue to rise.
But it remains unclear how open the envoys will be to offering any concessions as the government continues to lag in its implementation of structural reforms and in tax collection. The troika rejected last week’s appeal by Finance Ministry officials for a 15 percent reduction in the special consumption tax on heating oil and for an increase in the number of heating allowances.
The initiative divided the ministry itself with reports that Finance Ministry Yannis Stournaras had not sanctioned the proposal and that his deputy Christos Staikouras had received the go-ahead from Samaras. The rumors, though rebuffed by the ministry, have fuelled speculation of Stournaras’s possible departure ahead of next year’s local authority elections.

ekathimerini.com , Saturday October 12, 2013 (16:47) 





SDOE goes after funding sources of Golden Dawn

As judicial officials investigating criminal activities linked to Golden Dawn prepare to bring new charges against party officials and lawmakers, representatives of the country’s Financial Crimes Squad (SDOE) are seeking to determine what sources of funding were available to the ultra-right party.
Apart from some 500,000 euros in state funding the party has received over the past year (and some 200 million euros from MPs’ salaries that went into the party’s coffers on the orders of leader Nikos Michaloliakos), GD is believed to have benefited from at least another 2 million euros from various sources, a source told Kathimerini. The cost of maintaining some 70 offices as well as financing the party’s “Greeks only” food distribution and blood donation campaigns is estimated at between 2 and 3 million euros, the source said. But determining which individuals or private firms contributed this cash is far from straightforward and an unprecedented task in the country’s post-dictatorship period, according to judicial officials who met with SDOE representatives last Friday.
Meanwhile Kathimerini has learned that the counter-terrorism agency and the National Intelligence Service (EYP) used some of the most sophisticated wiretaps available to listen in on conversations between members of Golden Dawn. Sources said the eavesdropping intensified after the murder of rapper Pavlos Fyssas by a GD supporter on September 17 with the phones of more than 300 GD officials tapped by the secret services.

ekathimerini.com , Saturday October 12, 2013 (17:36) 




Creditors reject 15 pct reduction on heating oil tax

By Prokopis Hatzinikolaou and Nikos Chrysoloras
Greece’s creditors are reported to have turned down the government’s proposal for a 15 percent reduction to the special consumption tax on heating oil and an increase in the number of heating allowances, according to sources, although the Finance Ministry has not confirm the news yet.
The ministry is now said to be preparing another proposal providing for the allowance to increase from 0.28 euros to 0.35 euros per liter, to be given to many more heating oil consumers based on their income, and for 25 percent of it to be paid in advance.

ekathimerini.com , Friday October 11, 2013 (20:29)  

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