Subject: A.N.A. Bulletin 13/9/93 From: miltos@nfl2.irc.nrc.ca Athens News Agency Bulletin, September 13, 1993 =============================================== Athens, 13/9/1993 (ANA) - Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis on Saturday said that his government had kept its pledge to make the Greek economy stronger and warned that a return to the economic policies of the previous decade would plunge the country further into debt. "We worked hard to make our country strong and proud again. We put the interests of the nation and the people above our narrow political interests. We took great, difficult and painful decisions to put Greece back on its feet and we asked the people to make sacrifices", the premier said at an official dinner to mark the opening of the 58th Thessaloniki International Fair. "Now that the time has arrived for the Greek people to reap the fruits of its sacrifices, an alliance of specific financial interests and personal ambitions has disrupted the government's course, striking a direct blow against both Greece and the Greek people". Referring to a March 1990 letter from European Commission President Jacques Delors that emphasised the need for "drastic" measures and implementation of a long-term recovery programme, Mr. Mitsotakis said he had kept his pledge to the Greek people to implement such a programme without compromise. "What is the present state of the Greek economy ... The answer has been provided by all objective observers who have been monitoring our economy - the European Community, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the International Monetary Fund. The Greek people, however, do not need international organisations to know that the economy is stronger today that it was in 1990", he said. The premier added that, although the public deficit has been reduced, the economy" has not yet been completely freed from the burdens of the past", noting that 25 per cent of the taxes paid by the Greek people went to pay interest on loans from the '80s. Mr. Mitsotakis said that despite these obstacles and difficulties, the government's policies had yielded considerable improvements in Greece's economic indicators and warned that cancelling planned denationalisations of state - owned companies would jeopardise these improvements. "In 1993, investments have begun to rise and will be five per cent greater than in 1992. Exports rose for the third consecutive year despite an international recession. Unemployment is levelling off: In the last seven months there has been a slight downward trend, from 7.9 per cent to 7.3 per cent in contrast to the rest of Europe where three million people joined the ranks of the unemployed in the first six months of the year. Inflation fell to 14.6 per cent in August and will continue to fall over the next few months. At the end of the year, if our policies are not overturned, inflation will be around 12 per cent - the lowest rate for the last 15 years. In the first half of the year the current accounts showed a surplus for the first time and our foreign exchange reserves have reached 8.5 billion dollars from 2.3 billion in March 1990. Our competitiveness has increased and Greece's gross domestic product (GDP) is growing at a time when in the rest of Europe it is shrinking, "he said. The premier said that despite the problems that remained, the government had been successful in restoring confidence in the Greek economy. "If confidence in the economy is lost, then everything could be lost", he said, adding that the sharp drop in share prices following this week's announcement of early elections clearly illustrated the "grave danger lurking ahead if Greece returns to the failed policies of the '80s". The prime minister presented an overview of the government's policies and achievements in the last three years, including tax reform, infrastructure works, social insurance and privatisation. "Our government was the first in post-war Greece that had the courage to curb decisively the size of the public sector and the scope of the state's intervention ... This is crucial for our country's course. The progress in privatisation must not be halted", he said. "Greece has become stronger in the last three years. We moved a step forward although this was not achieved without cost. The Greek people, through their sacrifices and hard work, paid the price of the economy's restructuring. The government paid the price with temporary unpopularity. We did not have the financial ability to satisfy as we would have liked the existing social needs because we had one inviolable principle: we will not conduct social policy with borrowed money", he said, adding that some steps had been taken to address social imbalances. Mr. Mitsotakis said the future course of the Greek economy was now in the hands of the Greek people. "If on October 10 the Greek people choose to move Greece forward, then 1994 will be an excellent year for the Greek economy. The continuation of a climate of confidence in the drachma that our government has created and the momentum created by the large infrastructure works and privatisations will permit us, as already announced, to end the austerity in salaries and state pensions", he said. Noting that even international organisations such as the OECD agreed that wage and pension freezes should be lifted, Mr. Mitsotakis said wage increases would be slightly above inflation and pledged additional relief for recipients of state pensions. He also reviewed several large, self-financing infrastructure projects underway that would spur the economy. "The new international airport at Spata is a 500 billion drachma investment and will create 5,000 new jobs in the construction phase. Private power plants in Thisbe are a 100 billion drachma investment and will create 1,000 new jobs in the building phase. The casinos and marinas are investments of 300 billion drachmas and 5,000 new jobs", he said. "The economic prospects for 1994, provided that our policies are continued, are promising. But what will happen if Greece returns to the failure and decline of the '80s? The answer is simple. The Greek people will be called on to pay a huge sum because of the cancellation of the privatisation. This year an additional 400 billion in taxes will be levied if the privatisations are cancelled... The confidence, the huge investments and the new jobs will be lost. More importantly, if we do not meet the conditions for economic convergence [ set by the Maastricht treaty] then we will certainty lose all moneys Greece is to receive under the Delors II package of aid to the European Community's less developed countries", he said. "Our economy is like a plane that has begun its take-off. If the engines - that is, investments and trust - are suddenly turned off, then the plane will plunge back to earth and the Greek people will most certainly pay dearly for the crash", he added. Mr. Mitsotakis said that when the government assumed office in 1990 it had been aware that there was no easy way out of the economic morass but had shouldered the responsibilities of resolving a problem which it had not created. "The October 10 elections will be critical for the future of our country. In today's ever-changing world, the power exercised by a nation is dependent more that ever before on its economic power. Our dream for Greece is for it to expand its influence through its unrivalled economic talent and the strength of its education and culture over the broader region comprising its historic field of activity. The 1,300 Greek business currently established in the Balkans and the Greek-owned merchant fleet, ranked first internationally, illustrate our enormous potential", he said. "Through peace, co-operation, national unity and, above all, responsibility and work, Hellenism will once again win the place it deserves in a united Europe and the world. The progress of the Greek economy will once again become a substantial source of national strength and a toll to satisfy social needs. This is the potential that will open up to October 10 if Greece takes the great decision to move forward", he said. "The first four-year term of the PASOK government was a period of lavish benefits. Thus in the second term, rather that 'even better days' it brought austerity and hardship... We did the opposite. In the first term we built. We had the courage to remain uncompromising to the end. We restored Greece's pride and strength. Thus the time has come in the second term for us to enjoy the fruits of our sacrifices and efforts", he said. Mr. Mitsotakis said the Greek people were faced with a clear choice on October 10. "Will Greece stand tall and proud ... dominant in its broader region or will it return to disrepute and weakness?? Will we move forward with the completion of Greece's economic restructuring or will we return to the economic, moral and national decay of the '80s? For me the answer is crystal clear: we will stand tall, unyielding and uncompromising, fighting passionately for our principles and beliefs and our vision for the future. The Greek people will not turn back. Greek people will not turn back. Greece will not turn back", he said. The main opposition party, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) in its response to the premier's speech, said that it was solely concerned" in absolving himself of blame". "Mr. Mitsotakis' sole concern in [Saturday's] summing up of what has been achieved in the past four years is to convince others that he is not to blame for anything", an announcement from PASOK press office said. "His insistence on pinning blame for his own failure on what he took over from PASOK shows the extent of irresponsibility on his part. We call on him once more: compare current economic indices with those he inherited from PASOK in June 1989 which will show the unbearable weight the New Democracy government has piled on the national economy". In its response, the Coalition of the Left and Progress said: "No matter what Mr. Mitsotakis may say, he cannot conceal the truth. The people have paid dearly for New Democracy's policies". To reverse the present catastrophic course, [we must] change the administration of funds [institute] a bold, democratic tax reform, streamlining and granting full autonomy to public services and significantly improving wages and salaries", the statement said. Athens, 13/9/1993 (ANA) - Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis said yesterday Greek voters next month had to choose between his government's policies for a stable future or the return of discredited socialism. "There are two crystal-clear choices which the Greek people have to make today", Mr. Mitsotakis told a news conference in Thessaloniki. "Will we follow the path of a free-market economy or will we return to nationalisation? Will we steadily progress towards united Europe or will we turn back to the Third World experiments?" Mr. Mitsotakis said. The premier defended his government's work to "rehabilitate a staggering economy inherited from the socialists in April 1990", citing favourable reports from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). "The reports says exactly what we have been saying to the people - that our economy is now moving in the right direction with favourable future prospects. If our political opponents do not believe what we say, then they should at least believe the IMF and OECD reports", he said. The premier called for early elections last week when two of his conservative deputies defected to a new party founded by his former foreign minister Antonis Samaras. Mr. Mitsotakis has branded his one-time protigi and the deputies who left his party "back stabbers" and "traitors" who ignored the will of 47 per cent of the people who voted for the New Democracy party. But in Thessaloniki the premier went a step further and called on deputies planning to quit the party, to do so as quickly as possible. "If there are others considering the same move, they should do so. It is the best thing they can do and I call on them to leave as soon as possible. Both New Democracy and the new government will come out strong", Mr. Mitsotakis said. "Greece works, produces and moves ahead. This is the message of this year's - the 58th - Thessaloniki International Fair" the premier said after visiting various Helexpo pavilions. Mr. Mitsotakis visited the Cyprus, US and EC pavilions and those of the Greek Aluminium Federation and the Greek Police. At the EC pavilion he was greeted by Greek European Commissioner, Ioannis Paleokrassas. Earlier, the premier visited the TIF head office, where he was briefed by Alexander Bakatselos, the president of Helexpo, the organisers of the conference. Mr. Bakatselos emphasised the significance of Helexpo regional policy , especially recent exhibitions in Komotini and Ioannina. Athens, 13/9/1993 (ANA) - Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis met with New Democracy European Parliament deputies last night after returning from Thessaloniki. Eurodeputy Panayiotis Lambrias said after the meeting that the premier had asked the group to participate in New Democracy's re-election campaign. "Our slogan is: Greece will not go backwards. The country's problems are national, economic and social. We must not return to the 'lost decade'", he said. Alden Biesen, Belgium 13/9/1993 (ANA - K. Verros) - EC mediator Lord Owen told the EC Saturday that he hoped a peace deal could be reached in Bosnia-Herzegovina "within a few weeks". Speaking at an informal meeting of the EC's foreign ministers at the weekend, Lord Owen said "there appears to be a growing possibility of hope for peace". Greek Foreign Minister Michalis Papaconstantinou told his EC counterparts that Belgrade should be told there would be a relaxation of UN-imposed sanctions against Serbia and Montenegro if there were goodwill, such as that displayed till now, in reaching a settlement in Bosnia-Herzegovina. "There should be an undertaking at lease of future gradual lifting of sanctions, should Serbia continue to display its present disposition for a peaceful settlement of the conflict, "Mr. Papaconstantinou said. Mr. Papaconstantinou said Serbs and Croats should be persuaded once more to make further concessions, and the Moslem side to be more flexible. --- Constitutional obligations may prevent Greece's new prime minister form attending the extraordinary EC summit scheduled for October 29. At the informal meeting of foreign ministers on the weekend to organise the summit on economic and monetary issues, Mr. Papaconstantinou briefed his counterparts on the difficulties arising from the call for early elections in Greece, to be held October 10. The constitution requires the new prime minister to attend parliament for the vote of confidence in the new government's policy statement. Mr. Papaconstantinou added that, constitutionally, Greece's president could not represent the prime minister, unlike other EC member-states. He asked the meeting to consider a change of date. Mr. Papaconstantinou also briefed the meeting on PLO chairman Yasser Arafat's impending visit to Greece. Mr. Papaconstantinou said the government would brief Mr. Arafat on Community policy and the granting of economic aid. Sofia, 13/9/1993 (Macedonian Press Agency) - Ecumenical Patriarch Vartholomeos called for schismatics to return to the fold at a special mass at the Alexander Nevski Church in Sofia yesterday, marking the end of his official five-day visit to Bulgaria. "We appeal to our brethren, not to participate in the dismemberment of Christ's body", the Patriarch said. Meanwhile, despite generally favourable press for the Patriarch's attempts to re-unite the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Democrazia, a centre-rightist paper, launched a stinging attack on him. The paper published a report by dissident priest Yanko Dimov, who described the Patriarch's appeals as "malicious" intervention in the internal affairs of the Bulgarian Church. Dimov also attacked Bulgarian President Zhelyu Zhelev and speaker Alexander Jordanov for favouring the state's intervention in church affairs. President Zhelev said after his meeting with Vartholomeos that the fate of the Church was of great concern to the State but stressed that he would not intervene in church affairs.