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Tag: Greece

  • Inside The HOTTEST Celebrity Vacations! – Perez Hilton

    Celebs are usually giving it their all. Posing for red carpet pictures, sharing their new projects, going across the world to promote their work… It’s a glamorous but busy life! And the glamor doesn’t stop when the cameras stop and all the noise dies down. If anything, the sizzling life of a celeb is cranked up to 100 on their luxurious vacations!

    Here are some of the sexiest, most lavish, skin-showing, exotic vacations celebrities have ever taken…

    Dua Lipa

    It would be a crime if we didn’t start this list with Dua Lipa AKA Mermaid Barbie herself! It’s been a joke for a long time that the pop star is “always on holiday” — and we have to say, we can see why. It was tough to pick just ONE vacation that we think was super hawt, but her August 2025 rendezvous in Spain with her pals looked like too much fun to pass up.

    Cruz Beckham

    Ah, the Beckhams. The first people to come to mind when you hear the word “yacht” — how could we not include them? A standout moment for the iconic fam was earlier this year when Cruz Beckham broke the internet by wearing matching speedos with his dad David Beckham. Double trouble!

    Sabrina Carpenter

    (c) Sabrina Carpenter/YouTube

    We’ll keep this Short N’ Sweet. Sabrina Carpenter‘s European vacation in summer 2024 took her to places like Italy and France. The humid weather definitely got her natural waves popping out in her iconic bleach blonde hair, with a skin-tight red swimsuit to accentuate her figure — SEE HERE. Sexy!

    Kim Kardashian

    Kim Kardashian Goes NUDE For Magazine Shoot -- Nothin' But Paint...
    (c) SKIMS/YouTube

    The KarJenners have been on too many vacations to count, but Kim Kardashian‘s body shots in Los Cabos, Mexico earlier this year had fans DROOLING! Go swiping in her post to see why by clicking HERE! Whew!

    Kylie Jenner

    Kylie jenner sexy vacation greece
    (c) Kylie Jenner/Instagram
    Kylie jenner sexy vacation greece
    (c) Kylie Jenner/Instagram
    Kylie jenner sexy vacation greece
    (c) Kylie Jenner/Instagram

    Another member of the KarJenner clan leaving little to the imagination. Mz. Kylie Jenner took it all the way to Paxos, Greece in a teeny tiny bikini with her pals this past July. Boats, beaches, and baddies — what more could you ask for? Gorg!

    Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce

    Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce Are NOT Living Together Full Time Yet Even After Engagement!
    (c) MEGA/WENN

    How could ANYONE forget the sizzling walk Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce took down the beaches of The Bahamas in early 2024? We’re pretty sure those pics of Tayvis making out in the ocean are burned into everyone’s memory from how HAWT they were! Couple goals.

    Priyanka Chopra Jonas

    Priyanka Chopra Jonas also took her rockin’ bod to The Bahamas. She shared some SIZZLING pictures in July of herself in a teeny tiny bikini having fun on the beach. Nick Jonas and their daughter Malti Marie were also present for some sweet family time! Cute.

    Megan Thee Stallion

    Megan Thee Stallion Sued By Ex-Employee Who Claims She Hooked Up With Another Woman In Front Of Him!
    (c) Adriana M. Barraza/WENN

    Megan Thee Stallion BROKE the internet when her beyond-sexy bikini pics she took in The Bahamas this July ended up doubling as a soft launch! CLICK HERE to look! Fans were amazed by just how flawless she looked, but they still somehow spotted her beau Klay Thompson chilling off to the side of the pool in a lounger.

    Charli XCX

    Charlie XCX met gala red carpet 2025
    (c) MEGA/WENN

    365 vacay girl! Charli XCX shared a cheeky bikini-thong moment from Palermo, Sicily in May 2025, leaving fans’ jaws on the ground. The sun, the sea, the views, the BUNS — what a stunning moment in time. See what we mean by clicking HERE! So HAWT!

    Do U agree with our picks for the hottest celeb vacations ever? Who would U choose as the number one most sexy? Let us know in the comments (below)!

    [Image via Dua Lipa/Kim Kardashian/Megan Thee Stallion/Instagram]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Turkey Says Lebanon-Cyprus Maritime Deal Violates Turkish Cypriots’ Rights, Is Unacceptable

    ANKARA (Reuters) -A maritime demarcation deal signed between Lebanon and Cyprus violates the rights of Turkish Cypriots on the island and is therefore unacceptable, Turkey said on Thursday.

    Lebanon and Cyprus on Wednesday signed the long-awaited deal, which aims to pave the way for potential exploration of offshore gas fields and deepen energy cooperation in the Mediterranean.

    Turkey, a NATO member, does not recognise the Greek Cypriot government on the ethnically-split island of Cyprus, and is the only country to recognise the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. It has repeatedly complained that Greek Cypriots were disregarding and usurping Turkish Cypriot rights.

    ‘NOT POSSIBLE FOR US TO ACCEPT’

    “It is not possible for us to accept any agreement in which the rights of the TRNC are disregarded,” the Turkish Defence Ministry said at its weekly press briefing, using an acronym for the Turkish Cypriot government.

    “We evaluate that this accord, which disregards the TRNC’s rights, is also in violation of the interests of the Lebanese people, and tell our Lebanese counterparts that we are ready for cooperation on maritime issues,” it added.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesman Oncu Keceli said the deal was another example of Greek Cypriots disregarding the rights of Turkish Cypriots, and said the Greek Cypriot administration was not the sole representative of the island and therefore did not have the authority to take decisions concerning the whole island.

    “We call on the international community, namely countries of the region, not to support these unilateral steps by the Greek Cypriot Administration and not to become instruments in attempts to usurp the legitimate rights and interests of the Turkish Cypriots, who are sovereign and equal elements of the island,” Keceli said on X.

    Cyprus was split in a Turkish invasion in 1974 after a brief Greek-inspired coup. The last round of peace talks between the two sides collapsed in 2017, with efforts to revive them at a stalemate since.

    (Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu; Editing by Conor Humphries)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    Reuters

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  • World’s largest-known spider’s web reveals different species “having a party” instead of preying on each other

    What is thought to be the world’s largest-known spider’s web, housing tens of thousands of arachnids, has been discovered in a cave on the Albanian-Greek border.

    After researchers published their findings of two different spider species peacefully cohabiting in a giant colony nestled in a pitch-black, sulfur-rich cave, evolutionary biologist Lena Grinsted likened the “extremely rare” occurrence to humans living in an apartment block.

    “When I saw this study, I was very excited because … group living is really rare in spiders,” Grinsted, a senior lecturer at the U.K.’s University of Portsmouth, told The Associated Press. “The fact that there was this massive colony of spiders living in a place that nobody had really noticed before — I find extremely exciting.”

    The results of the study, published last month in the journal Subterranean Biology, spread rapidly online due to the striking images of the giant 1,140-square-foot spider’s web, a carpet-thick sprawl stretching along a narrow passage wall inside Sulfur Cave, which extends into Albania from its entrance in Greece.

    This arachnophobe’s worst nightmare was quickly labelled the “world’s largest spiderweb.”

    An undated image shows spider’s webs on a wall in Sulfur Cave, on the Greek-Albanian border. 

    Istvan Urak / AP


    But the most surprising thing about the spider colony — which boasts an estimated 110,000 spiders — had less to do with its size and more to do with what scientists found inside the huge mass of funnel-shaped webs.

    Two different spider species — about 69,000 Tegenaria domestica, or common house spider, and 42,000 Prinerigone vagans — were living side by side and thriving. The behavior, which had never been observed before, stunned scientists as, typically, the larger house spider would prey on its smaller neighbor.

    “So often if you have spiders in close vicinity, they will fight and end up eating each other,” said Grinsted, who was not part of the cave study but has extensively researched spiders. “We can sometimes see that if there’s an abundance of food that they sort of become a bit less aggressive.”

    In addition to spiders, the terrestrial fauna in the cave include centipedes, terrestrial isopods, scorpions and beetles, the researchers said.

    “In the stream passage located close to the cave entrance, a dense swarm of adult chironomid flies fills the air in the immediate vicinity of the sulfidic stream, and a large portion of the cave wall is covered by a massive colonial spider web,” the study’s authors write

    Abundant food source

    Scientists are keen to understand how and why the two species came to coexist peacefully in a “permanently dark zone” about 160 feet from the entrance of the cave, carved out by the waters of the Sarandaporo River to form the Vromoner Canyon. (The study’s authors note that Vromoner means “smelly water” in Greek.)

    Part of the answer, the research suggests, may lie in the combination of the estimated 2.4 million midge flies that buzz around the spider colony — an “unusually dense swarm” that provides a constant food source in an otherwise predator-scarce environment. The scientists also speculate that the friendly living arrangement could be a result of darkness impairing the spiders’ vision.

    However, Grinsted says it is more likely that the larger spiders evolved or simply grew accustomed to responding to vibratory cues when the small flies land on their silken web — and maybe don’t attack otherwise.

    EU Albania Greece Spider

    An undated image shows a female Metellina Merianae spider in its individual web on a wall in Sulfur Cave, on the Greek-Albanian border. 

    Istvan Urak / AP


    “Spiders, in general, are not particularly good at seeing stuff … and that includes these two species,” she said. She added that the two species might cooperate “to some extent in building the web … but I think it’s highly unlikely that they cooperate in anything else like prey capture, in brood care, or looking after each other’s babies.”

    Grinsted draws parallels between the cohabiting spiders and how humans tend to coexist in apartment blocks.

    “You’re very happy to share the stairs, the lift,” she said. “But if anybody comes into your living room and you haven’t invited them, you’ll be aggressive towards them.”

    She added that while many spiders are “typically solitary, very aggressive” toward other critters, the cohabitation of two species is “relatively common” once spiders have evolved the ability to live in groups.

    “But again, because these two species have never been found to live together and never been found to live in groups, it makes it particularly exciting,” she said.

    “The web is dense — like a blanket”

    Blerina Vrenozi, a biologist and zoologist at the University of Tirana, in Albania, who co-authored the research paper, told the AP that the expeditions this year helped understand “how this mystery existed in there.”

    “The DNA is interesting because they revealed that the species which live inside the cave is different from the one which lives outside the cave,” she said. “So it’s the same species, but different DNA.”

    The cave colony’s giant web was first observed in 2021 by a team of Czech speleologists led by Marek Audy. A year later, the Czech team expanded to include scientists from multiple universities, which led to the recently published scientific paper.

    “The web is dense; it’s more like a blanket, and when there’s danger, the female crawls back and hides, and no creature of a higher order can dig her out of there,” Audy said. “Spiders in the cave lay about a third of the eggs compared to spiders that live outdoors. Because it’s certain that they will raise their offspring there … so they can afford to lay fewer eggs.”

    EU Albania Greece Spider

    An undated image shows a female, left, and male Metellina Merianae spider in their individual webs on a wall in Sulfur Cave, on the Greek-Albanian border.

    Istvan Urak / AP


    Audy added that the cave, which is also home to large bat colonies, also thrive on the abundance of midges inside the humid, dark space. “They are constantly having a party there, both the spiders and the bats,” he said.

    Seemingly ideal environment

    The study noted that the methodology used might “slightly overestimate” the total population count of spiders in the colony, as some funnel webs may be abandoned or unoccupied. However, other experts agree that the team’s exciting new research could offer broader evolutionary clues and deserves deeper study.

    Sara Goodacre, professor of evolutionary biology and genetics at the School of Life Sciences, at the U.K.’s University of Nottingham, says these kinds of research projects help pave the way for more studies that could prove “fundamental to our understanding of what forces shape the world around us — spidery or not.”

    “Natural selection will favor the ‘best’ strategies … the ‘winning strategy,’ whatever this is,” she said. “My guess is that the benefits of being part of this community far outweigh the costs.”

    She added that if the dynamics in the seemingly ideal environment of abundant food and relative safety were to change, “then ‘freeloading’ will emerge and it will all break down.”

    The politics of coexistence will hopefully not prove trickier above ground. Audy said that Albania has already asked which side the newly famous spiders lie.

    “From a conservation point of view, we did something interesting there and marked out a border,” he said. “I just looked into it — and the spider web is on the Greek side.”

    The discovery of the massive web comes just months after Australian scientists discovered a new species of the deadly funnel-web spider that is bigger and more venomous than its relatives, nicknaming it “Big Boy.” 

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  • Onassis ONX Celebrates Five Years of Bridging Art and Technology With a New Space

    After five years in the Olympic Tower, this hub for artists merging X.R., A.I. and performance is set to move to Tribeca. Photo by Ed Lefkowicz.

    Launched in 2020 by the Onassis Foundation and NEW INC, the incubator of the New Museum, Onassis ONX Studio has evolved into one of New York’s leading hubs for artists working at the intersection of extended reality (X.R.), A.I. and performance. Closely connected to Onassis Stegi in Athens, the two organizations form a dynamic international channel for creative exchange within the broader Onassis Foundation ecosystem. In New York, Onassis ONX provides an accessible acceleration space for ambitious productions, while at Onassis Stegi—founded in 2010—the focus is on education and professional development, nurturing a rapidly expanding arts-and-technology scene. Rooted in Greece’s long tradition of theater and dramaturgy, this has inspired compelling intersections of theater, dance and technology.

    To mark its fifth anniversary, Onassis ONX has announced its relocation from its original venue in the Olympic Tower on Fifth Avenue, just above the Onassis Foundation’s U.S. headquarters, to an expanded 6,000-square-foot space in the heart of Tribeca at 390 Broadway, which also houses PPOW and Matthew Brown Gallery. Set to open in January, the new facility will continue to operate as a hybrid residency, research lab and production studio, offering additional space for exhibitions and public programming that extend the reach of the work developed within the organization.

    The new studio includes a motion-capture stage twice the size of the previous one, a three-wall seamless projection room designed for museum-scale installations and an expanded sound studio—four times larger than the original—equipped with a high-fidelity system for immersive sonic environments. It also features enhanced computational infrastructure, including a new server array designed to support A.I. and generative media.

    A visitor stands in a green-lit room facing large dual projections filled with vivid neon outlines of faces and geometric patterns, creating an immersive and otherworldly digital environment.A visitor stands in a green-lit room facing large dual projections filled with vivid neon outlines of faces and geometric patterns, creating an immersive and otherworldly digital environment.
    Onassis ONX is the Onassis Foundation’s global platform for digital culture, championing artists who push the boundaries of new media through the creation, exhibition and circulation of immersive, technology-driven works. Photo: Mikhail Mishin

    “It’s been amazing to see how much interest, focus and support for art and technology has expanded in New York City and around the world,” Jazia Hammoudi, program director of Onassis ONX, told Observer ahead of the announcement. “It’s been a long journey for many of us, but witnessing this evolution now feels incredibly rewarding.”

    Created as an arm of Onassis Culture—the cultural branch of Greece’s leading philanthropic organization, which has championed “aid, progress and development” since 1975—ONX quickly became central to the foundation’s mission as a cultural innovator and supporter of contemporary art. From the outset, the foundation has operated from a deeply humanist perspective, Hammoudi explained. “It’s an organization that takes its lead from artists rather than dictating from the top down, continually looking to understand what’s actually happening across the cultural and intellectual landscape. It’s about paying close attention to what artists and audiences are thinking about, interested in and in need of. That same responsiveness to artistic and technological innovation is what inspired the foundation’s expansion in both New York and Athens.”

    At its core, ONX is first and foremost an accelerator. Its foundation lies in the production space, tools and technical consultation it provides—but beyond that, it functions as an aesthetic and intellectual incubator. “We offer extensive creative consultation and curatorial support to artists, so they’re not only producing work here but also developing its conceptual and public trajectory,” Hammoudi added. “An artist can come to ONX, build their work and we’ll help them find the right platform for it—whether that’s a festival, an exhibition within our own programs in New York or Athens, or through one of our partner institutions.” Onassis ONX also helps artists secure additional funding, either through internal seed grants and commissions or through its global network of partners.

    A man observes an installation of stacked CRT monitors displaying synchronized video portraits, illuminated by intersecting red light bars against a black gallery wall.A man observes an installation of stacked CRT monitors displaying synchronized video portraits, illuminated by intersecting red light bars against a black gallery wall.
    “Tribeca Immersive” is the Tribeca Festival section co-produced by Onassis ONX. AI Ego | Photographer: Mikhail Mishin

    Since its founding, ONX has supported an impressive roster of artists and collectives redefining the intersection of performance and technology, including LaJuné McMillian, Peter Burr, Stephanie Dinkins, Sutu (Stuart Campbell) and Jayson Musson. Projects developed at ONX often blur the boundaries between theater, gaming environments, installation and live performance—echoing the Onassis Foundation’s broader mission to explore the future of culture and human experience through technology.

    “Our goal is to provide holistic support for artists working in new media because we recognize that many traditional museums and cultural institutions weren’t designed to meet their needs,” Hammoudi said. “Our work is twofold: to provide artists with the resources and infrastructure they need and to help institutions evolve into what 21st-century creativity actually looks like.”

    ONX currently supports about 85 member artists worldwide who have full access to production facilities, seed grants, funding opportunities, internal open calls and ongoing staff consultation. This membership model ensures long-term, sustained support for artists working in new media. “We know that this kind of work takes time—and often requires many different minds and kinds of intelligence to bring to completion,” Hammoudi explained. “As advocates and field builders, we see these ongoing relationships with artists as essential to the growth and vitality of the field itself.”

    The new space will also enable the organization to deepen and expand its global partnerships. As part of its mission as a field builder, Onassis ONX collaborates with international partners to develop residencies, exchange programs, fellowships, exhibitions, funding initiatives and distribution channels.

    An overhead view of an installation featuring a glowing horizontal screen framed by soil and wooden branches, projecting the silhouette of a human figure intertwined with digital circuitry patterns.An overhead view of an installation featuring a glowing horizontal screen framed by soil and wooden branches, projecting the silhouette of a human figure intertwined with digital circuitry patterns.
    Onassis ONX supports artists and creative teams through capacity-building programs, research and incubation initiatives, acceleration services, seed funding, exhibitions, fellowships and collaborative partnerships The Power Loom | Photographer: Mikhail Mishin

    For example, Onassis ONX is a partner on Lincoln Center’s Collider Fellowship, runs a residency exchange with MIT’s Open Documentary Lab and maintains a core partnership with NEW INC, where artists track work within the ONX space. Looking ahead, Hammoudi said the goal is to continue expanding these partnerships to support a growing cohort of artists. “It’s important for us to maintain a deep, ongoing connection with our 85 member artists while also creating ways to offer short-term, project-based support to those who come to us with a specific challenge or need. This expansion allows us to do both.”

    Notions of hybrid identity beyond biological, mythological and digital limits

    Inaugurating Onassis ONX’s new space will be “TECHNE: Homecoming,” an exhibition uniting six visionary artists whose multimedia installations explore hybrid identity shaped through biological, mythological and digital kinships. “The show reflects our belief that technology can deepen the ways we connect—with one another, with our histories and with the stories we choose to tell about the future,” Hammoudi said.

    The artist lineup embodies the kind of interdisciplinary, cross-knowledge collaboration the foundation has long supported, featuring works that range from Andrew Thomas Huang’s two-channel video installation and sculptural environment—rooted in a Buddhist folktale and informed by his collaborations with Björk and FKA Twigs—to Tamiko Thiel’s Atmos Sphaerae, a video installation tracing Earth’s atmospheric evolution from primordial void to Anthropocene through a poetic translation of molecular data into visual form that collapses conventional timescales. Meanwhile, Damara Inglês’s “phygital” installation reimagines the afterlife of Queen Nzinga of Angola through the lens of Cyber-Kimbandism, merging Bantu cosmology, A.I. and 3D design to position technology as both a spiritual conduit for ancestral connection and a tool of anti-colonial resistance.

    A surreal digital forest scene featuring a humanoid figure crouched near a vividly colored animal resembling a feline, both rendered in iridescent tones amid glowing trees.A surreal digital forest scene featuring a humanoid figure crouched near a vividly colored animal resembling a feline, both rendered in iridescent tones amid glowing trees.
    Miriam Simun, Contact Zone (Level 2), 2024. Courtesy of the artist and Onassis ONX

    In a similar spirit, Natalia Manta’s looping animations, digital tombs and hybrid sculptures oscillate between the archaeological and the alien, provoking transhistorical reflections on human time across geographies and collective memory. Sister Sylvester presents Drinking Brecht, an experimental work of automated theater and performance-as-installation that functions as a Marxist-feminist laboratory. Finally, Miriam Simun’s generative three-channel projection Contact Zone Level 2 brings the Swiss Alps into collision with the artist’s own intestines beneath an A.I.’s gaze, continuously reconfiguring to explore the symbiosis between organic and artificial life—a visionary intersection of nature, technology and consciousness beyond human perception. “Technology becomes the mediator for this imagining, allowing a hybrid being—a new chimera—to emerge between nature and self. It’s a wild and deeply thought-provoking work,” Hammoudi said.

    In each case, technology enables artists to construct more expansive worlds around their practice, extending the reach of their bodies and presence while dissolving the traditional genre boundaries that once defined art-making. “Those old taxonomies—this artist does that, that one does this—are becoming almost irrelevant,” Hammoudi noted, emphasizing that many of these works use digital tools not as spectacle but as instruments for expanding how we sense, perceive and experience reality—or move beyond its human limits.

    A long table of participants lit by warm lamps engage in a live performance or workshop, with projected black-and-white visuals of hands and the words “Follow Instructions” on the screen behind them.A long table of participants lit by warm lamps engage in a live performance or workshop, with projected black-and-white visuals of hands and the words “Follow Instructions” on the screen behind them.
    An installation view of Sister Sylvester‘s Drinking Brecht (2024). Courtesy of the artist and Onassis ONX.

    The exhibition will be part of the annual Under the Radar Festival, which this year includes two Onassis ONX performances—We Have No Need of Other Worlds (We Need Mirrors) by Graham Sack and ¡Harken! by Modesto Flako Jimenez—as well as MAMI, a mainstage production conceived and directed by Mario Banushi and commissioned by Onassis Stegi. Together, these works underscore the foundation’s multifaceted support for artists working at the intersection of performance and new technology—an ever-expanding field as creators increasingly experiment with digital embodiment, exploring performance, the shifting boundaries between analog and digital and what it means for the body to exist in real time and space within contemporary digital culture.

    Balancing studio production and public programming

    Looking ahead, Onassis ONX will continue to balance its mission of providing a dedicated workspace for artists with a growing commitment to public engagement. Beginning in 2026, ONX will host two in-studio exhibitions each year—one in January and another in the fall—along with quarterly public programs developed in collaboration with organizations such as NEW INC, Pioneer Works, Rhizome and Lincoln Center. The foundation also plans to continue its major annual off-site exhibition each June, following last year’s presentation at Tribeca Immersive. “This model allows us to keep the studio primarily a development space while maintaining a consistent public presence through exhibitions and thought-leadership events announced on our website and newsletter,” Hammoudi said.

    A visitor moves through an indoor installation resembling a lush, overgrown meadow filled with tall grasses and wildflowers, integrating natural elements with digital and video art components.A visitor moves through an indoor installation resembling a lush, overgrown meadow filled with tall grasses and wildflowers, integrating natural elements with digital and video art components.
    The move from Midtown to Tribeca doubles the studio’s square footage and puts Onassis ONX at the center of downtown New York’s dynamic contemporary scene. There Goes Nikki | Photographer: Mikhail Mishin

    In Athens, the focus remains educational, with ongoing incubation programs such as ONX Futures and the annual A.I. Summer School each July. The Athens space will also present an ONX showcase in May and contribute to the foundation’s broader cultural calendar, which includes the Borderline Festival in April. The foundation also produces Plásmata, its large-scale digital art biennial in Pedion tou Areos Park. Held every two years, it is one of the few outdoor digital art biennials in the world, combining large-scale installations, performances and music with works by both Greek and international artists, including recent participants such as John Fitzgerald, Jiabao Li, William Kentridge and Johan Bourgeois.

    Ultimately, ONX’s mission—across both New York and Athens—is to expand the understanding of art and technology not only as mediums but as frameworks for examining how we live today. As traditional genres continue to dissolve, the foundation remains committed to supporting artists working at these frontiers, where art and life increasingly intersect.

    Audience members sit in a dark theater watching a panoramic multi-channel projection of black-and-white portraits overlaid with animated purple roses and subtitles, blending personal memory with digital imagery.Audience members sit in a dark theater watching a panoramic multi-channel projection of black-and-white portraits overlaid with animated purple roses and subtitles, blending personal memory with digital imagery.
    “TECHNE: Homecoming” is presented as part of Under the Radar Festival, which this year includes two Onassis ONX performances and one mainstage production commissioned and produced by Onassis Stegi. Photo by Ed Lefkowicz

    Onassis ONX Celebrates Five Years of Bridging Art and Technology With a New Space

    Elisa Carollo

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  • Photos of the unobstructed ancient Parthenon in Athens

    Photos of the unobstructed ancient Parthenon in Athens

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  • Europe’s Role Reversal: The Problem Economies Are Now Further North

    The European debt crisis of the early 2010s created an image of a continent cleaved in two: The fiscally responsible core countries led by Germany versus the spendthrift southern periphery of Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain—disdainfully dubbed PIGS.

    Nowadays, there has been a role reversal. Europe’s three biggest economies are stuck in a cycle of weak growth, leading to widening budget deficits. France is the epicenter of this shift and remains mired in a budget and political crisis, while the U.K. is eyeing tax hikes to try to narrow the gap and avoid spooking markets. Famously frugal Germany and the Netherlands are taking on debt, albeit from lower levels.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Chelsey Dulaney

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  • Greece Launches Search After Migrants Rescued off Lesbos

    (Reuters) -Greek authorities launched a search-and-rescue operation off the island of Lesbos on Monday after rescuing seven migrants from the sea southwest of Cape Agrilia, officials said.

    Two people were also recovered unresponsive, the Coast Guard said, adding that the search is continuing for any additional missing persons.

    The operation involves two vessels, a helicopter, and a land-based Coast Guard unit, it added.

    Greece, at the southern tip of the European Union, has long been a favoured gateway to Europe for migrants and refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia. 

    The Mediterranean nation has recently toughened migration rules, following a resurgence of arrivals from Libya via the Greek islands of Crete and Gavdos.

    (Reporting by Antonis Pothitos; Editing by Toby Chopra)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

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  • Greek singer-songwriter Dionysis Savvopoulos buried in a state funeral

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Popular Greek singer-songwriter Dionysis Savvopoulos was buried Saturday at Athens’ First Cemetery in a state-sponsored funeral, four days after his death at age 80.

    Savvopoulos had died of a heart attack after battling cancer since 2020.

    Thousands came to pay their respects to a well-beloved, if sometimes controversial, artist as he lay in state at a chapel of the Athens Metropolitan Cathedral Saturday morning. Hundreds made the nearly 2-kilometer (1.2-mile) walk behind the hearse to the cemetery.

    The presence of a Greek navy band playing mournful music was indicative of the change in Savvopoulos’s status, from someone lionized by anarchist-leaning leftists in the 1960s and 1970s and dismissed by the establishment as a long-haired freak, to a figure embraced by the same establishment and cultural mainstream.

    Savvopoulos never changed his musical style — a blend of rock, folk-rock, jazz and Greek popular music — to conform to mainstream tastes. Always a political animal, he didn’t shy away from criticizing the left and its illusions, especially on his 1989 album “The Haircut,” whose sleeve showed him beardless with long locks. A few of his songs drew the enmity of some of his longtime admirers. The beard grew back but his politics remained moderate.

    Conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the first of many who eulogized Savvopoulos during the funeral service, used the lyrics of the 1972 song “Messenger Angel” to portray the artist as a speaker of uncomfortable truths that many did not want to hear. “If he had no pleasant news to tell/better tell us none,” he quoted the song’s ending.

    Others who joined in eulogizing Savvopoulos were former President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, fellow musicians, artists and literary figures, some from his hometown of Thessaloniki, and one of his two grandsons.

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  • Analysis-Turkey Pressing for Western Fighter Jets to Claw Back Regional Edge

    By Ece Toksabay and Jonathan Spicer

    ANKARA (Reuters) -Anxious to bolster its air power, Turkey has proposed to European partners and the U.S. ways it could swiftly obtain advanced fighter jets as it seeks to make up ground on regional rivals such as Israel, sources familiar with the talks say.  

    NATO-member Turkey, which has the alliance’s second-largest military, aims to leverage its best relations with the West in years to add to its ageing fleet 40 Eurofighter Typhoons, for which it inked a preliminary agreement in July, and later also U.S.-made F-35 jets, despite Washington sanctions that currently block any deal. 

    Strikes by Israel – the Middle East’s most advanced military with hundreds of U.S.-supplied F-15, F-16 and F-35 fighters – on Turkey’s neighbours Iran and Syria, as well as on Lebanon and Qatar, unnerved Ankara in the last year. They laid bare key vulnerabilities, prompting its push for rapid air power reinforcement to counter any potential threats and not be left exposed, officials say.

    Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has sharply criticised Israel’s attacks on Gaza and elsewhere in the Middle East and once warm relations between the two countries have sunk to new lows. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Turkey’s bases, rebel allies and support for the army in Syria posed a threat to Israel.  

    Greece, a largely symbolic but sensitive threat for Turkey, is expected to receive a batch of advanced F-35s in the next three years. In years past, jets from the two NATO states engaged in scattered dogfights over the Aegean, and Greece has previously expressed concerns about Turkish military build-up.

    TURKEY WOULD BUY SECOND-HAND PLANES TO GET THEM FAST

    For the Typhoons, Turkey is nearing a deal with Britain and other European countries in which it would promptly receive 12 of them, albeit used, from previous buyers Qatar and Oman to meet its immediate needs, according to a person familiar with the matter. 

    Eurofighter consortium members Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain would approve the second-hand sale proposal, in which they would provide Turkey with 28 new jets in coming years pending a final purchase agreement, the person said. 

    Erdogan is expected to discuss the proposal on visits to Qatar and Oman on Wednesday and Thursday, with jet numbers, pricing, and timelines the main issues. 

    Erdogan is then expected to host British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz later this month, when agreements could be sealed, sources say. 

    A UK government spokesperson told Reuters that a memorandum of understanding that Britain and Turkey signed in July paves the way “for a multibillion-pound order of up to 40 aircraft,” adding: “We look forward to agreeing the final contracting details soon.”

    German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, who was in Ankara last week, said Berlin supported the jets purchase and later told broadcaster NTV that a deal could follow within the year.

    Turkey’s defence ministry said no final agreement had been reached and that talks with Britain were moving in a positive direction, adding other consortium members backed the procurement. Qatar and Oman did not immediately comment. 

    TURKEY, US HAVE POLITICAL WILL TO RESOLVE ISSUES

    Acquiring the advanced F-35s has proven trickier for Ankara, which has been barred from buying them since 2020 when Washington slapped it with CAATSA sanctions over its purchase of Russian S-400 air defences. 

    Erdogan failed to make headway on the issue at a White House meeting with President Donald Trump last month. But Turkey still aims to capitalise on the two leaders’ good personal ties, and Erdogan’s help convincing Palestinian militant group Hamas to sign Trump’s Gaza ceasefire agreement, to eventually reach a deal. 

    Separate sources have said that Ankara considered proposing a plan that could have included a U.S. presidential “waiver” to overcome the CAATSA sanctions and pave the way for an eventual resolution of the S-400 issue and F-35 purchase. 

    Turkey’s possession of the S-400s remains the main obstacle to purchasing F-35s, but Ankara and Washington have publicly stated a desire to overcome this, saying the allies have the political will to do so. 

    The potential temporary waiver, if given, could help Ankara increase defence cooperation with Washington and possibly build sympathy in a U.S. Congress that has been sceptical of Turkey in the past, the sources said.

    “Both sides know that resolving CAATSA needs to be done. Whether it is a presidential waiver or a congressional decision, that is up to the United States,” Harun Armagan, vice chair of foreign affairs for Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, told Reuters.

    “It looks awkward with all of the other diplomacy and cooperation happening at the same time.” 

    Turkey’s foreign ministry did not respond to questions about floating a waiver to U.S. counterparts or discussions on resolving the S-400 issue. The White House did not immediately comment on whether Ankara raised a waiver option.

    A State Department spokesperson said Trump recognizes Turkey’s strategic importance and that “his administration is seeking creative solutions to all of these pending issues,” but did not elaborate further.

    Asked about Turkey’s separate agreement to buy 40 F-16s, an earlier generation fighter jet, a U.S. source said that talks have been dogged by Turkish concerns about the price and desire to buy the more advanced F-35s instead. 

    TURKEY HAS DEVELOPED ITS OWN STEALTH FIGHTER

    Frustrated by past hot-cold ties with the West and some arms embargoes, Turkey has developed its own KAAN stealth fighter. Yet officials acknowledge it will take years before it replaces the F-16s that form the backbone of its air force.

    Jet upgrades are part of a broader effort to strengthen layered air defences that also includes Turkey’s domestic “Steel Dome” project and an expansion of long-range missile coverage. 

    Yanki Bagcioglu, an opposition CHP lawmaker and former Turkish Air Force brigadier general, said Turkey must accelerate plans for KAAN, Eurofighter and F-16 jets. 

    “At present, our air-defence system is not at the desired level,” he said, blaming “project-management failures.”

    (Reporting by Ece Toksabay in Ankara and Jonathan Spicer in Istanbul; Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Washington; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

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  • Turkish Cypriots Vote for a Leader as Peace Talks Hang in Balance

    NICOSIA (Reuters) -Voters in breakaway north Cyprus went to the polls on Sunday in a presidential vote seen as a test on whether talks to reunify the divided island can be revived.

    Incumbent Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar, who backs a two-state solution, faces the main centre-left rival Tufan Erhuman, who favours renewed United Nations-sponsored negotiations on a federal settlement with Greek Cypriots.

    Tatar’s position for a two-state deal has been rejected by Greek Cypriots, while peace talks have been in deadlock since 2017.

    Seven candidates are standing, but polls suggest the race will hinge on Tatar and Erhuman, with a runoff on October 26 if there is no outright winner.

    Cyprus was split in 1974 in a Turkish invasion triggered by a brief Greek-backed coup, which followed sporadic fighting after the breakdown of a power-sharing administration in 1963.

    North Cyprus is recognised only by Turkey. Polls opened at 0500 GMT and will close at 1500 GMT, with results expected late on Sunday.

    (Writing by Michele Kambas; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

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  • Bosnia’s Serb Republic Appoints Interim President, Seals Dodik’s Departure From Post

    SARAJEVO (Reuters) -The parliament of Bosnia’s Serb Republic appointed Ana Trisic Babic as an interim president on Saturday, acknowledging officially for the first time that former President Milorad Dodik is stepping aside after a state court banned him from politics.

    Trisic Babic, Dodik’s close ally, will hold the position for one month until new presidential elections are held in the Serb Republic on November 23.

    The parliament also annulled a series of separatist laws that were passed over the past year after Dodik had been indicted for defying decisions of the international envoy and the constitutional court.

    Dodik, a pro-Russian nationalist who wants the Serb Republic to secede and join Serbia, had so far refused to step down and continued to perform duties and travel abroad in the capacity of president. He is appealing the state court’s verdict at the constitutional court.

    The U.S. Treasury Department said on Friday it has removed four Dodik allies from a sanctions list, in a move praised by Dodik who has been campaigning to get U.S. sanctions against himself lifted.

    He has been sanctioned by the U.S. and Britain for obstructing the terms of the Dayton peace deal that ended Bosnia’s war in the 1990s, as well as by several European countries that say his separatist policies endanger peace and stability in Bosnia.

    (Reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic; Writing by Renee Maltezou, Editing by Franklin Paul)

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  • Two Migrants Die After Boat Hits Rocky Shore on Greek Island of Chios

    (Reuters) -Two migrants died after their boat collided with a rocky shoreline on the Greek island of Chios late on Thursday, Greece’s coast guard said on Friday.

    Fire service crews initially rescued five people from the site, including two who were unconscious, the coast guard said. Subsequent searches on land located 24 more migrants in the surrounding area.

    Authorities said 12 people were taken by ambulance to Chios General Hospital, where two unconscious women were pronounced dead. The remaining 17 people were transferred to the Chios Reception and Identification Center.

    Greece was on the front line of a migration crisis in 2015 and 2016, when more than a million people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East and Africa crossed into Europe.

    Since then, migrant flows have ebbed. Greece has recently toughened its migration rules, following a resurgence of arrivals from Libya via the islands of Crete and Gavdos.

    (Reporting by Antonis Pothitos; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus.)

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  • Greece Adopts Law Extending Working Hours Despite Protests

    By Angeliki Koutantou and Renee Maltezou

    ATHENS (Reuters) -Greece’s parliament approved a bill on Thursday allowing private sector employers to extend working hours despite protests from workers already struggling from a cost-of-living crisis.

    The bill, which allows employers to enforce 13-hour work days, up from the current eight hours, aims to make the labour market more flexible and effective, the conservative government says.

    But the proposal has triggered two general strikes this month by workers who see it as a move to undermine their rights just as they are struggling with stagnating wages and the rising costs of food and rent.

    “When the rest of Europe is in discussions to reduce working hours, in Greece we increase them,” said 41-year-old barman Themis Lytras, who said his rent had doubled over the past two years.

    Greece already has among the longest working weeks in Europe at around 40 hours, EU data shows, against an average 34 hours worked in Germany or 32 in the Netherlands.

    GREEKS STRUGGLE DESPITE ECONOMIC REBOUND

    Greece is recovering from a debilitating 2009-2018 debt crisis, marked by years of belt-tightening, that wiped out a quarter of national output. 

    Strong economic growth in recent years has opened up room for tax cuts and pay increases. But wages remain below pre-crisis levels and Greeks’ purchasing power is among the lowest in the European Union, Eurostat data shows.

    Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ government has seen its popularity wane in opinion polls partly due to disappointment over the failure of the economic recovery to generate higher living standards.

    “After the crisis, we expected a return to normality,” said George Koutroumanis, a former labour minister who called the new law “absurd”.

    The extended work shift can only be applied three days a month and up to 37 days a year. The bill protects people from being fired if they refuse to work overtime, but unions say it strips workers of negotiating power in a country where there is undeclared work and where average wages remain relatively low.

    The bill, which also gives employers more flexibility on short-term hirings and allows staff to work four days a week through the entire year upon prior agreement, was approved by a majority of lawmakers in the 300-seat parliament.

    (Additional reporting by Mark John and Lefteris PapadimasEditing by Ed Osmond, Edward McAllister and Gareth Jones)

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  • A Lowell barber, a bullet, and a wedding turned tragic

    LOWELL — From the sidewalk outside Majestic Barber Shop on Middlesex Street on Friday, owner George Voutselas traced a finger toward the bullet hole in the window frame at the front of the shop that he’s run for five and a half decades. The now-cracked glass that bears the shop’s name stands strong despite this clash with a bullet, which Voutselas points out is still lodged in the wooden frame.

    The shooting that caused the damage must have happened in the early hours of Wednesday. The shop is closed that day, but Voutselas had stopped by in the late afternoon to grab something when he noticed the spiderweb cracks stretching across the exterior of the double-pane window.

    “I said, ‘What the hell,’” Voutselas recalled.

    At first, he didn’t realize a bullet grazing the edge of the glass had caused the cracks. It wasn’t until he called the Lowell Police and they came to investigate that he learned the truth.

    “The officer said, ‘That looks like a bullet in there,’ and I said, ‘What?!’” Voutselas said.

    Who fired the bullet — or why — is a mystery. At least for now.

    It was reported in an emergency radio broadcast on Wednesday afternoon that a spent shell casing was recovered nearby around the intersection of Middlesex Street and Moulton Avenue. The Lowell Police Department was unavailable to comment about the shot that struck Voutselas’ shop.

    The window will need to be replaced, and when it is, Voutselas said he’s been tasked with calling police so a detective can come by to dig the round out of the wood.

    Voutselas, who turns 84 in December, spent nearly his entire life in Lowell before moving a few years ago to a 55-and-older community in Dracut. His father, Arthur, started the shop in 1921 after immigrating from Greece in 1914. Voutselas bought it in the early 1960s, and he’s been cutting hair on Middlesex Street ever since.

    For 55 years, he’s been a fixture in the neighborhood — first just across the street, in a space that’s now a parking garage, and since 2001 at the current location at 50 Middlesex St.

    “It’s a long legacy,” Voutselas said. “They even gave me a key to the city when we turned 100 years here.”

    The framed key hangs next to the mirror in front of the barber chair.

    “I’ve been here a long time. I’ve never gotten hit by a bullet though,” he said with a chuckle.

    The cracked window wasn’t the first shock Voutselas faced in recent weeks — and it doesn’t come close to what he experienced last month.

    On Sept. 21, he and his family were caught in the chaos of a shooting at Sky Meadow Country Club in Nashua, New Hampshire, that led to the death of one man.

    “We met face to face with the shooter, actually,” Voutselas said, recalling the traumatic episode while seated in his desk chair situated next to his shop’s fractured front window.

    Voutselas was at the country club for the wedding of his great-niece. The outdoor ceremony took place that afternoon with about 120 guests in attendance. Later, everyone moved inside for the reception.

    While the celebration was underway that night, gunfire erupted at Prime, the club’s restaurant. Authorities say Hunter Nadeau, 23, of Nashua, a former employee of the restaurant, walked in and opened fire.

    Voutselas would later learn that Robert DeCesare Jr., 59, also of Nashua, stood up to protect his family from the shooter and was gunned down.

    “Killed him,” Voutselas said, “right in front of his wife and daughter.”

    As reported in multiple outlets from witness accounts, a guest is alleged to have struck Nadeau in the face with a chair, knocking the gun from his hands.

    “Thank God for that guy,” Voutselas said. “He saved a lot of lives, probably.”

    As this was going on inside Prime, Voutselas and members of his family, including his wife, daughter, and 12-year-old grandson, and the other wedding guests heard the gunfire and were urged by staff to escape through the kitchen. Voutselas recalled his daughter gripping his hand so tightly as they fled.

    Amid the chaos, he noticed a man running with them — his face bloodied and unfamiliar.

    “This guy is running with us,” he said. “We thought he had just fallen and banged his head. They opened up the door to go out back, and he ran ahead of us.”

    Voutselas said he was standing just a few feet away when they became aware of who this man was: the alleged gunman.

    “He looked at all of us, and said, ‘Free the children of Palestine, free the children of Palestine,’ and ‘I’m the shooter,’ and he’s going like this,” Voutselas said, mimicking the motion of a gun with his hand. “He was making believe he was shooting at us.”

    Voutselas noted that, at the time, none of them realized the gunman had been disarmed. There was fear he might pull out another weapon and start shooting. The group retreated back inside. The suspect fled.

    Following a massive police response, Nadeau was tracked down nearby. He has since been charged with second-degree murder and multiple other offenses related to the incident. While a motive has not been publicly confirmed, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella has said they do not believe the shooting was a “hate-based act,” despite Nadeau’s alleged comments regarding Palestine.

    Authorities have also said there is no known connection between Nadeau and DeCesare.

    Though the shooter had fled by the time they went back inside the club, Voutselas recalled how police on scene warned there may be a second gunman — information that was later ruled out. Law enforcement instructed guests to run down a hill to get away from the scene. Women who had been dancing moments earlier left their shoes behind in the rush. The group was taken to the Spit Brook Road Fire Station, where the news of the shooting was already playing on TV.

    “It was like a movie,” Voutselas said. “I’m watching the drones, the helicopters, the SWAT teams.”

    From there, they were bussed to the Sheraton Hotel on Tara Boulevard, where news crews and a heavy police presence gathered. Voutselas noted that the bride and her bridesmaids had escaped out another door at the club during the chaos, knocking on the door of a nearby residence. They stayed there until they reunited with family at the hotel.

    “They fell to the ground and cried,” Voutselas said. “What a scene that was.”

    “Now every year they are going to have to relive that whole thing,” he added, referencing the future wedding anniversaries.

    Voutselas also reflected on the death of DeCesare. It was later revealed by DeCesare’s mother, Evie O’Rourke, that her son had been dining with family that night. His daughter’s wedding was scheduled just six weeks after the shooting. Voutselas said he heard the family still plans to hold the wedding on the original date, while adding, “But she won’t have a father to walk her down the aisle.”

    “The whole world has gone crazy,” Voutselas said. “Now you just go out and shoot people. In the old days, you’d go to the park and duke it out.

    “And to do that?” he added. “People are flipping out, but you can’t tell who is going to flip out at the time. They say take guns away from people. Listen, take away the machine guns and all that. No one is going to go hunting with a machine gun.”

    While sitting in his shop on Friday, Voutselas recalled seeing photos of Nadeau on the news the day after the shooting. He immediately recognized him as the man they had encountered outside the venue.

    Voutselas described the alleged gunman as a bizarre character — “out there,” he said, based on that brief but unsettling exchange.

    “His demeanor and the way he talked and the way his eyes were,” he said. “For a while there, I was seeing his face. I was seeing his eyes.”

    Voutselas added simply that his family is doing well, despite the tragic and horrific encounter. In the meantime, Voutselas is still trimming hair at his shop, behind the cracked front window with a bullet embedded in the frame, waiting to be recovered.

    It’s been an unusual few weeks, and he hopes nothing worse is waiting around the corner.

    “It’s crazy,” he chuckled. “It seems like they’re trying to get me. God is pissed off at me about something.”

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social. 

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  • Former Greek PM Tsipras Quits Parliament Amid Rumours of New Party Launch

    ATHENS (Reuters) -Former Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, the leftist firebrand who stormed to power on an anti-austerity agenda at the peak of Greece’s debt crisis in 2015, resigned as a parliamentary deputy on Monday, amid rumours that he is preparing to launch a new political party.

    Tsipras became a global household name during Greece’s fierce negotiations with international lenders over its third and final financial bailout, which ended in 2018. He was voted out of power in 2019, having been forced to accept the austerity he had campaigned against in opposition. 

    “I’m resigning as a member of parliament with the Syriza party, I am not resigning from political action,” Tsipras said in a filmed statement. Addressing his former colleagues later, he said: “We will not be rivals. And perhaps soon we will travel together again to more beautiful seas.” 

    Tsipras has not commented on his plans, but there has been local media speculation that he may return to politics, potentially posing another challenge to Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ centre-right government, whose popularity has dropped in the polls. 

    Tsipras stepped down as head of Syriza in 2023 following its second heavy election defeat to Mitsotakis’ New Democracy party that came to power in 2019, after years of austerity fatigue and a bailout that critics said the country did not need. 

    His move led to the fragmentation of Syriza and the formation of new, smaller political parties. The Socialist PASOK party later took over as the main opposition.

    “Tsipras’ resignation today is the first decisive step in forming a new party,” head of ALCO pollsters Costas Panagopoulos told Reuters. A September ALCO poll showed New Democracy, which has ruled out a snap election before its term ends in 2027, at 24% versus PASOK, seen at 11.5% and Syriza at 6.2%.

    (Reporting by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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  • Europe Must Fight Tax Fraud Gangs, Corruption, EU Chief Prosecutor Says

    ATHENS (Reuters) -Europe is losing an estimated 50 billion euros ($58 billion) a year from tax and customs fraud, which are now the most attractive criminal activities in the bloc, and more needs to be done to fight the gangs responsible, the EU’s top prosecutor said. 

    Laura Codruta Kovesi was speaking on Thursday at Piraeus port in Athens, where The European Public Prosecutor’s Office has been carrying out a major probe. 

    “We want to send the criminals behind this massive fraud a strong message: the rules of the game have changed, no more safe havens for you!” Kovesi told reporters at Piraeus. “We have to fight back. As Europeans.”

    EPPO has been probing a string of fraud cases that have rocked Greece, including a case dubbed “Calypso” that involved alleged gangs extending from China to at least 14 EU countries, which were operating out of Piraeus.  

    The agency has confiscated over 2,400 shipping containers at the port, which is majority-owned by China’s COSCO, in the largest seizure to date across the EU. 

    Gangs allegedly underreported the value of goods coming from China into the EU, resulting in lost VAT revenue and duties of around 800 million euros since 2017, EPPO says.

    EPPO’s investigations in recent years have also indicated that state corruption, which helped plunge Greece into a 2009-2018 debt crisis, has not been uprooted. Some of the cases have hurt the centre-right government’s popularity.    

    During her visit to Greece this week, Kovesi said she sought the deployment of more prosecutors and resources for EPPO in Athens. Ministers pledged support.

    She also urged Greece to amend laws protecting politicians from prosecution, adding that such immunity hinders EPPO’s probes. 

    EPPO has referred two cases to the Greek parliament, the only body that can investigate ministers under the constitution. 

    One of them is linked to Greece’s worst rail disaster in 2023. The most recent case relates to Greek farmers and state officials suspected of defrauding the EU of subsidies for the use of pastureland since 2019.

    (Reporting by Renee Maltezou; Adidtional reporting Yannis Souliotis; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

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  • Factbox-What Happens to Gaza Flotilla Activists Who Are Detained by Israel?

    (Reuters) -Israeli forces have intercepted boats carrying aid bound for Gaza, in the latest attempt by foreign activists to break an Israeli blockade and deliver supplies to the Palestinian territory.

    Below is an outline of the legal implications for the 500 parliamentarians, lawyers and activists onboard more than 40 civilian boats that made up the flotilla.

    WHAT HAPPENED IN PREVIOUS ATTEMPTS?

    As with previous attempts to breach the blockade, the detained activists are being taken to Israel where they will face deportation, according to Israel’s foreign ministry.

    Some of those on the latest flotilla, including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, have been previously detained by Israeli authorities as they attempted to break the blockade .

    In the past, activists detained by Israel were not criminally prosecuted and instead their presence was treated as an immigration matter.

    When Thunberg’s previous flotilla was intercepted in June, she and three other activists signed deportation orders waiving the right to delay their removal for a period of 72 hours so they could appeal and were immediately ejected from the country.

    Eight other activists, among them French nationals including Rima Hassan, a French member of the European parliament who is participating in the latest flotilla, refused to sign the orders on the grounds that they had never intended to enter Israeli territory but were forcibly taken to Israel by the authorities. 

    They were detained near Tel Aviv airport – Hassan was held briefly in solitary confinement, an NGO representing her said – and appeared before a tribunal which upheld their deportation orders and ordered their removal. All those deported were banned from returning to Israel for 100 years, legal representatives said. 

    IDENTIFICATION AND PROCESSING BEFORE DEPORTATION

    Adalah, a human rights organisation and legal centre in Israel, has represented aid flotilla participants who were detained by Israel.

    Suhad Bishara, the organisation’s legal director, told Reuters on Thursday that her team was awaiting the arrival of those detained overnight in the port of Ashdod, 40 km (25 miles) north of the Gaza Strip.

    She said once the flotilla crews arrived, they would be identified and transferred to the immigration authority to process them for anticipated deportation, before being moved into custody, likely in Ketziot Prison in southern Israel.

    “Our main concern of this stage, of course, is their well-being, their health condition as well, making sure that they all get the legal advice prior to the hearings in the Immigration Tribunal and while (they are) in Israeli prison,” she said. 

    DETAINEES TO BE HELD IN HIGH-SECURITY PRISON

    Omer Shatz, an Israeli international law expert at Paris’ Sciences Po University in Paris, said unlike where flotilla activists were held last time, Ketziot was a high-security prison that did not normally hold immigration detainees.

    He said the activists may be held there because processing 500 people would be logistically difficult for Israel. Shatz, however, described Ketziot Prison as being known for its harsh conditions.

    QUESTIONS OVER REPEAT OFFENDERS

    Adalah said in an earlier statement about the legal process that although Israeli authorities would have a record of repeat participants in aid flotillas, activists such as Thunberg and Hassan, were generally treated in the same way as first-time participants, subject to short-term detention and deportation.

    It added however that there had been recent proposals by Israeli officials, among them National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir that flotilla participants be subjected to prolonged detention.

    “There are serious concerns that activists may be treated more harshly than in previous flotilla missions,” the organisation said. 

    A spokesperson for Israel’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters questions on the detention of the activists.

    Israel’s foreign ministry said that the flotilla was warned by the navy that it was approaching an active combat zone and violating a “lawful naval blockade”, and asked organisers to change course. It offered to transfer the aid to Gaza, the foreign ministry said.

    (Reporting by Alexander Cornwell in Tel Aviv, Sinan Abu Mayzer in Ashdod and Pesha Magid in Jerusalem, writing by Aislinn Laing; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

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  • Gaza Flotilla Says Unlit Vessels Approached Its Boats, Prompting Security Measures

    (Reuters) -The international flotilla trying to deliver aid to Gaza said on Wednesday that several of its boats were approached by unidentified vessels, some navigating without lights.

    The Global Sumud Flotilla said in post on Telegram that the vessels have departed, and participants implemented security protocols in anticipation of a possible interception.

    (Reporting by Mrinmay Dey in Bengaluru; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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  • Frigate sale to Greece turns Italy’s active warships into fast cash

    ROME — Italy is to sell Greece two Fremm-class frigates which are currently in service with the Italian navy, marking a new chapter in Italy’s successful series of export sales to naval customers who need quick delivery.

    The national armaments directors of Italy and Greece signed a preliminary agreement on Monday for the sale to the Greek navy of the Bergamini – a general purpose FREMM – and the Fasan – an anti-submarine variant.

    Both were built by Italian state shipyard Fincantieri and have been in service with the Italian navy since 2013.

    Fincantieri, which will handle the sale, said in a statement the final deal would also include a support package it would manage.

    Greek media has reported each vessel will be sold for €300 million ($352 million).

    A key selling point will be speed: the delivery will take a fraction of time it would require to build new vessels at a moment when Greece is seeking to respond to rising military tensions in the Mediterranean and rivalry with its neighbor Turkey.

    The deal follows the sale by Italy to Indonesia and Egypt of vessels that were already under construction for the Italian navy.

    When Indonesia signed a €1.18 billion contract last year to acquire two Fincantieri PPA vessels, Italy accelerated the deal by offering vessels already being built to fulfill the Italian navy’s own order for seven ships.

    This year, Italy filled the consequent gap in its navy order book by placing an order for two more PPA vessels with Fincantieri which will be delivered to the Italian navy in 2029 and 2030.

    Italy has previously sold two Fremm frigates to Egypt which were already under construction for Italy and close to delivery.

    When they were sold they were promptly replaced by new orders to fill the gap for the Italian navy.

    The Greek sale will not only give Greece frigates fast but will also allow Italy to order two newer, upgraded FREMM ‘Evo’ frigates to fill the gap left in the Italian fleet.

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  • Greece Intends to Buy Four Used Bergamini Frigates From Italy

    ATHENS (Reuters) -Greece wants to buy four used Bergamini class frigates from Italy, Defence Minister Nikos Dendias said on Monday, as the NATO member seeks to modernise its navy.

    High-ranking officials from the two countries signed memorandums for naval cooperation, Dendias said in a statement after a meeting with his Italian counterpart Guido Crosetto in La Spezia in Italy.

    “One of the memorandums opens the door to acquire two FREMM frigates with an option to buy two more,” Dendias said without giving details of the cost.

    Greece plans to spend about 28 billion euros as part of a multi-year defence plan that includes the purchase of a fourth Belharra frigate from France and new submarines as it tries to keep pace with historic rival Turkey.

    Greece has a long-standing dispute with its NATO ally Turkey over maritime waters, energy resources and airspace in the eastern Mediterranean.

    (Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas; Editing by Alison Williams)

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