XpatAthens

XpatAthens

Heavy snowfall and icy conditions in many parts of Greece have resulted in several roads being closed to traffic in the north, as well as in mountainous regions in central Greece and near the capital, Athens. On Mount Pendeli, north of Athens, the stretch of Pendeli Highway from the 414 Military Hospital to the Aghios Petros junction has been closed off by orders of the police. Snow was also falling at midday in the capital's northern suburbs, though it has not hampered travel.

Northern Greece has seen the heaviest snowfall from a cold snap that swept into the country in the early hours of Tuesday, with police shutting down parts of the rural highways leading from Kastoria to Florina and to Ioannena.

There is also no access to the ski resorts of Vorras in Pella and Kalavryta in the northern Peloponnese, while on the island of Evia, motorists are advised to avoid the stretch of road between Halkida and Edipsos.

Motorists, especially in rural and mountainous parts of the country, are advised to limit their travels and to ensure that all necessary precautions have been taken, such as having snow chains for their vehicles.

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

The third and final vote in the first phase of the critical Presidential elections is set to take place at noon today. Should the government-sponsored candidate Stavros Dimas not be elected today, then general elections will take place on the 25th of January or 1st of February.

In order to secure Mr. Dimas’ election the coalition government will have to secure the support of 180 members of parliament. In the first vote Mr. Dimas received 160 votes and in the second he received an additional 8. In order to reach 180 votes, Mr. Dimas would have to attract the votes of MPs from the Democratic Left and Independent Greeks.

At present it seems unlikely that early elections will be avoided, as senior government officers have predicted that Mr. Dimas may receive a maximum of 173 or 175 votes. Nevertheless, should more MPs be considering to change their vote, they will do so at the final moment.

To read more, please visit tovima.gr/en

Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:16

Paperwork For Taxpayers Living Abroad

Authorities are asking taxpayers who are resident in other countries to prove they are indeed based or employed abroad. The Finance Ministry’s General Secretariat for Public Revenues has issued a circular offering guidelines regarding the documents that must be submitted for taxpayers based abroad to be recognized as such. Unless the necessary papers are produced, they will be considered as residents of Greece and be asked to pay the amount of tax that Greek legislation provides for.

The taxpayers in question, who may have submitted some of the documents required or none at all, are at any rate obliged to provide the certificates that will confirm they have indeed moved their residence or their main professional activity to another country. Greeks living abroad will need to produce the following documents:

– Papers confirming that the taxpayer and their dependent family members are permanent residents of another country, such as a certificate from the state or municipal or other recognized authorities, proof of children’s education or home rental contract, or proof of owner residence abroad if that applies.

– A tax residence certificate, issued by the foreign tax authority, that illustrates that the taxpayer is resident in that country. If the taxpayer has settled in a country that has an agreement with Greece to avoid double taxation and has an income from this country, they can produce an application to avoid double taxation that carries the tax residence certificate and is in both languages.

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

By Prokopis Hatzinikolaou

Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:15

Full Speed Ahead For Elections

Despite the government gaining the support of 168 MPs in yesterday's second round of the presidential ballot, an improvement on the 160 votes it obtained in the first round, it looks increasingly difficult to garner the required 180 and avert snap elections early next year. Everything will be sealed on the third and final round of voting at noon on the 29th of December.

Until then there will be ongoing discussions in the background as a last resort to convince MPs to switch their votes and support the candidate.
 
Based on what we know now, even if the coalition manages to draw a few more MPs from the pool of independents or even the parliamentary groups of DIMAR and Independent Greeks the magic number of 180 needed to elect president in the third round of the presidential ballot remains very difficult to achieve. So despite the efforts, the understanding is that after December 29th the country will go to snap elections.

The way things stand now, the best case scenario is for the coalition to attract as many as 174-175 MPs which still leaves it short of electing Stavros Dimas but can be used as a powerful argument ahead of elections. The government will insist that the presidential ballot was a close call and the impasse was caused by Syriza's irresponsible stance. New Democracy hopes that in the case of snap elections it will be able to overturn the projected opinion poll results that put Syriza ahead. The pre-election campaign will be characterized by tough rhetoric and dilemmas by both sides in order to rally support.

To read more, please visit thetoc.gr/en

By Anna Zafiri

Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:14

Second Vote In Parliament Concludes

The second vote for the critical Presidential elections took place shortly after noon in Parliament, where as expected, the Assembly failed to elect a new President. The MPs will vote for a third time on the 29th of December.

In total 168 MPs supported the candidacy of the sole Presidential candidate Stavros Dimas, while 131 MPs voted against him and one MP as absent for the vote. This result marks an improvement over the first disappointing -for the government- vote.

In order to avoid snap elections, the coalition government will have to secure the support from a further 12 MPs in order to reach the goal of 180 votes in the Presidential election. Should Parliament fail to elect a new President, then general elections will called, with the 25th of January being the likeliest date.

The coalition government saw MPs Spyros Lykoudis, Grigoris Psarianos, Kostas Giovanopoulos, Christos Aidonis, Mika Iatridi, Panagiotis Melas, Stathis Boukouras and Chrysovalantis Alexopoulos.

To read more, please visit tovima.gr/en

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras on Sunday presented a compromise solution to end a political stalemate that looks likely to send Greece to early general elections in about a month's time. Speaking in an unscheduled televised address to lawmakers in the country's 300-seat Parliament just two days ahead of the second of three rounds of voting for a new president, Samaras called for consensus over the government's presidential candidate, Stavros Dimas, saying that the election of a new president would be followed by the formation of an "expanded" government of "pro-European parties."

He also appealed for lawmakers to hold the current Parliament together so as not to interrupt the process of a constitutional review, saying that general elections could then be scheduled "even by the end of 2015."

This first time the premier has conceded that elections could take place before June 2016, when the coalition government's four-year term expires. Samaras also stressed the need for negotiations with the country's international creditors to be wrapped up before any polls take place, saying that "we cannot be swamped in an electoral battle right now."

"Let us complete the negotiation and the constitutional reform and then we can find the timetable for elections even by the end of 2015."

Launching an attack on main opposition SYRIZA president Alexis Tsipras and the leader of the Independent Greeks, Panos Kammenos - the latter in relation to claims by a party deputy, Pavlos Haikalis, that he had been offered a bribe to back the government's candidate - Samaras said "this unfounded string of accusations about the bribing of deputies, which are always proven untrue, cannot continue."

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:13

Corfu To Operate Greece's 1st Hydroplane Strip

Merchant Marine Minister Miltiades Varvitsiotis and Deputy Infrastructure and Transport Minister Michalis Papadopoulos have signed a decision paving the way for the country’s first hydroplane strip at the Ionian island of Corfu.

The strip, which is to be operated by the island’s port authority, will be able to serve Greece’s first fleet of hydroplanes and improve connections between the island and mainland Greece.

The aim of the initiative is to boost tourism on the Ionian islands. Authorities hope to follow up with several more hydroplane strips on other islands in the Ionian and beyond.

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

The European Commissioner of Economic and Monetary Affairs Pierre Moscovici has favored a much lighter and less invasive supervision of the Greek economy. Mr. Moscovici, who recently visited Greece, argued that despite the huge public debt and the high rate of unemployment Greece has returned to financial growth and urged taking advantage of this development.

An agreement for the much-discussed emergency conditions credit line is likely to be approved and implemented after the current bailout program concludes. This credit line will be accompanied by supervision of the country’s finances, but to a lesser extent than before.

To read more, please visit tovima.gr/en

There was growing pressure on the government on Thursday, even from within its own ranks, to come up with some kind of proposal that might bring the political parties together and avoid early elections. A number of coalition MPs expressed their support for common ground to be found after the government’s candidate for president, Stavros Dimas, gathered just 160 votes in Wednesday’s ballot.

The threshold for electing Dimas was 200, as it will be in the second round on Tuesday. It will fall to 180 for the third vote on December 29.

New Democracy’s Dora Bakoyannis called for a “broad framework of consensus” to be formed. “What I am suggesting is that we could agree on a date for early elections next fall, so it is after the tourism season,” said the lawmaker. “This initiative must come from Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and Deputy Prime Minister Evangelos Venizelos.”

PASOK MP Leonidas Grigorakos also called for an agreement. “We have to move toward a climate of consensus,” he said. “We all need to water down our expectations.”

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:10

Behind The Scenes Of The Greek Presidential

A total of 160 positive and 135 negative votes managed to attract the nomination of Stavros Dimas in the first open vote for the Presidency of the Hellenic Republic held at 7:30 pm in the Greek Parliament. According to article 32 of the Greek Constitution, during the first and second ballots of the Presidential Election, a total of 200 votes are needed in order to successfully elect a new President.

Apart from the parliamentary groups of coalition government partners New Democracy and PASOK that count 155 MPs, five more MPs voted in favor of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’ nominee, Dimas. The five are Spyros Lykoudis, Grigoris Psarianos, Giorgos Ntavris, Christos Aidonis and Katerina Markou.

Amongst those who voted negative, apart from the opposition parties’ parliamentary groups (SYRIZA, ANEL, KKE, DIMAR and Golden Dawn) were independent MPs Byron Polidoras, Vassilis Kapernaros, Petros Tatsopoulos, Mimis Androulakis, Niki Founta, Vassilis Oikonomou, Chrysoula Giatagana, Panagiotis Melas, Rachel Makri, Theodoros Parastratidis, Markos Bolaris, Theodora Tzakri and Giannis Kourakos, some of whom were expected to vote in favor of Dimas. Emerging from the Parliament after the procedure’s completion, Melas underlined that on the remaining two ballots, he might change his vote and vote “Yes.”

Absent on the first ballot was ANEL’s Kostas Giovanopoulos, whose absence is considered meaningful, as it might leave the possibility open to vote in favor of Dimas in the following ballots. Also absent were the two former Golden Dawn MPs, Stathis Boukouras and Chrysovalantis Alexopoulos, who were expected to vote “Yes,” independent MP Giorgos Kasapidis, who earlier today lost his father and was also expected to vote in favor of the new President, and SYRIZA MP Anna Chatzisofia.

To read more, please visit greekreporter.com

By Aggelos Skordas

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