Spanish ENDESA opens new Greek subsidiary June 28, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Energy.add a comment
The CEO of ENDESA, Rafael Miranda, along with Mytilineos Group’s Chairman, Evangelos Mytilineos, inaugurated on June 26 Endesa Hellas, the new subsidiary in Greece.
Endesa Hellas will oversee the power construction and development projects in Greece contributed by local company Mytilieneos, as per the strategic alliance signed in March. Headquartered in Athens, the company will also be in charge of spearheading new businesses.
Jesús Olmos, General Manager of Endesa Europe; Dora Bakoyianni, Foreign Affairs Minister, and the Spanish Ambassador to Greece, Juan Ramon Martinez Salazar, attended the ceremony. Approximately 1,800 people also attended, mostly representatives of the Greek government, members of Parliament and heads of Greek main utilities and other businessmen.
Endesa Hellas will have start-up capital of Euro 1,200 million and will be Greece’s largest independent utility, with potential to expand into other markets in southeast Europe. The company aims to gain 10% of the Greek electricity market by 2010. Endesa owns 50.01% while Mytilineos owns the remaining 49.99% of Endesa Hellas. Mytilineos will contribute all its energy, thermal and renewable assets, as well as its current licences. Endesa Hellas will have the largest orderbook of power construction and development projects in Greece, including:
- A 334 MW CHP, scheduled to come on stream in June 2007
- A 430 MW natural-gas fired combined-cycle thermal plant, currently under construction. It should be completed by June 2009.
- A portfolio of more than 1,000 MW of renewable projects.
- A 600 MW coal-fired thermal plant.
- Other assets, including a 310 MW trading license, a new license for another combined-cycle gas plant and one for an international coal plant
- The new company’s activities will include construction and operation of thermal plants (natural gas and coal), renewable plants (wind farms, hydro and photovoltaic) and trading of electricity and CO2 emission rights. There are also plans for the company to gradually enter the supply business, depending on the market’s deregulation in accordance with EU directives of July 2007.
Creation of this company signals a major step forward for Endesa in its European expansion plan along the Mediterranean Basin, with the aim of consolidating its current position and leveraging existing value-creation tools to aid in development of new businesses. In addition, Endesa becomes the first entrant in one of Europe’s most attractive electricity markets, both strategically, given its growth prospects, and in terms of its pricing structure and interconnections with Italy, Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania.
Related Links > http://www.endesa.es
CIA Document confirms Kissinger’s involvement in selling Cyprus for 30 silver pieces June 28, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Cyprus Occupied, Politics.1 comment so far
Most noteworthy is the involvement of Henry Kissinger in giving the green light to Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus.
The recent release by the CIA of documents concerning the agency’s illegal surveillance of Americans and involvement in the assassinations of Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam, Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Republic, Salvador Allende of Chile, and Patrice Lumumba of Congo, as well as assassinations plots against Fidel Castro, prove what authors and scholars have already concluded about the agency. Most noteworthy is the involvement of Henry Kissinger in giving the green light to Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus.
The links between Kissinger and Turkey formed a long lasting relationship between Kissinger and the Israeli Lobby in the United States, particularly the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and the Turks, particularly the links between AIPAC and the American Turkish Council and individuals like Richard Perle, Marc Grossman, and Douglas Feith. That relationship was exposed with revelations stemming from information divulged as a result of the FBI’s firing of Turkish translator Sibel Edmonds and the concentration of the Brewster Jennings & Associates CIA front company on weapons of mass destruction and the Turkish nexus to nuclear materials trafficking from the former Soviet Central Asian states.
When Turkey invaded Cyprus in July 1974, Kissinger was only concerned about the continued operation of U.S. intelligence bases in Turkey and three in the presently under Turkish military control and occupied north zone of Cyprus: Yerolakkos, Mia Milia, and Karavas. Eventually, these listening stations were evacuated in 1975 by CIA agents and U.S. Marines.
Although Barbara Bush blamed CIA whistleblower Phil Agee for divulging the identity of Athens CIA station chief Richard Welch and blamed him for Welch’s assassination by left-wing terrorists in 1975, the confirmation of Kissinger’s support for the invasion of Cyprus is what triggered a wave of anti-American terrorist activity in Greece in the mid-1970s and well into the 1980s. It is Kissinger who is ultimately to blame for anti-American violence in Greece, both for his support of the Greek junta and his support for the Turkish invasion of Cyprus.
We can also now add Cypriot President Archbishop Makarios to the long list of foreign leaders targeted for assassination by the CIA and Kissinger. From the book “The Cyprus Conspiracy” by Brendan O’Malley and Ian Craig, we know that on July 15, 1974, Makarios’ Presidential Palace in Nicosia was hit with artilley fire from tanks while Makarios was greeting a group of young schoolchildren from Cairo. Makarios’ Presidential Guard fought the coup plotters off for several hours until the rebellious troops stormed the building and set fire to it. The CIA saw to it that Cyprus Radio broadcast the news that Makarios was dead.
It was a replay of Santiago, Chile and the anti-Allende coup the year before. Both events had Kissinger’s sordid fingerprints on them. Although Kissinger denied it, he has denied almost everything that shows him to be an arch war criminal, it was widely known that he believed Makarios to be the “Castro of the Mediterranean.”
Eventually, the right-wing junta that replaced Makarios collapsed along with the Greek military junta in Athens. Makarios, who continued to enjoy international recognition as President of Cyprus while in exile in London, returned to Cyprus to resume his Presidency. Makarios died suddenly from a heart attack in 1977, just shy of his 64th birthday.
On March 8, 1970, Makarios’ helicopter was was hit with bullets in an assassination attempt also linked to the CIA and the Greek Colonels junta in Athens. Kissinger, at the time, served as Nixon’s National Security Adviser.
And in a precursor to the neo-con purge that would drive out many experienced military, intelligence, and foreign service officers who opposed the Iraq war, Kissinger ensured that those within the State Department who opposed Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus were removed. They included the U.S. ambassador to Greece Henry Tasca, Cyprus Desk chief Tom Boyatt, and Greek desk chief George Churchill.
The newly-released CIA documents also show that Kissinger was furious at CIA director William Colby for divulging past CIA dirty tricks in the wake of Watergate. Kissinger said he was afraid that he could be blackmailed by the revelations about CIA misdeeds, much of which have come to light as a result of the recent CIA disclosures. Gerald Ford fired Colby and replaced him with George H. W. Bush.
Colby died in a suspicious boating accident in the Cheaspeake Bay in 1996. The CIA documents also reveal that former CIA director Richard Helms warned Kissinger that Colby’s disclosures were the “tip of the iceberg” and that much more damaging information might follow. Richard Nixon is quoted in the Watergate tapes referring to Watergate CIA burglars E. Howard Hunt and James McCord’s demand for money for his silence as threatening to blow open the “Cuba thing.”
It is interesting to compare what Nixon said to Helms’ statement: Nixon to Haldeman on June 23, 1972: “Of course, this is a, this is a Hunt, you will-that will uncover a lot of things. You open that scab there’s a hell of a lot of things and that we just feel that it would be very detrimental to have this thing go any further. This involves these Cubans, Hunt, and a lot of hanky-panky that we have nothing to do with ourselves.”
Kissinger to President Gerald Ford on Jan. 4, 1975: “Helms said all these stories are just the tip of the iceberg. If they come out, blood will flow.”
Nixon’s and Helms’ comments are now viewed by some historians of CIA operations as referring to the CIA’s most probable despicable act: involvement by some of its assets in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The released documents cite links between the CIA and right-wing Cuban exiles involved in plotting the assassination of Castro, Mafia chieftain Johnny Roselli, who was linked to Lee Harvey Oswald assassin Jack Ruby as well as to Mafia dons Salvatore “Sam” Giancana and Sabtos Trafficante, and Howard Hughes’ top assistant Robert Maheu, a former FBI agent, who acted as a liaison between Langley and the mob.
The recently-released and heavily-redacted CIA documents, called the “Family Jewels,” provide a great deal of confirmation of events already widely known to the public but they pale in comparison to the shocking revelations by Colby to the 1970s Frank Church and Otis Pike Committees and the Vice President Nelson Rockefeller Commission, all of which investigated abuses by the U.S. intelligence community.
Greek PM visits Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarch June 28, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Politics, Religion.add a comment
The first meeting of Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis following his arrival in Istanbul on 26 June was a visit to His All Holiness Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomeos I at the Patriarchate in Constantinopole.
PM Karamanlis addressed His All Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch saying that today’s challenges called for the spiritual contribution of churches and adding that the Ecumenical Patriarchate has a leading role at an international level due to the Patriarch’s leadership.
He said that the Ecumenical Patriarchate could not fulfill its high spiritual mission with obstructions that go against the basic notions and values of human rights and religious freedom. PM Karamanlis was referring to the closing of the Ecumenical Patriarchates’ Greek Orthodox Theological School of Chalki, on the island of Chalki, shut down by Turkish authorities in 1971.
In an interview with Greek daily Kathimerini on Sunday, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül addressed the issue of the Chalki Theological School and said that the status of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is specified in the Lausanne Treaty, implying it was out of the government’s jurisdiction.
In his address to PM Karamanlis yesterday morning, His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarchate Batholomew I, addressed this point to Karamanlis saying that it was a violation of human rights: “You know our positive views in relation to Turkey’s European perspective under conditions which are valid for every candidate member. This includes the recognition and satisfaction of the fair demands of this Ecumenical See and our community and all the minorities, the acceptance of which I’m sure you will convey to the officials of Turkey”.
Related Links >
http://www.ecupatriarchate.org
http://www.ec-patr.org/default.php?lang=en
http://www.ec-patr.net/en/psaltai/chalki.htm [Chalki Theological School]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecumenical_Patriarch_of_Constantinople








