Coach Carlo Ancelotti believes that a points deduction that nearly ruled AC Milan out of the Champions League has made them all the more determined to beat Liverpool in Wednesday’s final. Milan were punished last year for their part in a Serie A match-rigging scandal and Uefa came close to refusing them permission to play in the qualifiers.
Maybe it doesn’t matter which striker starts — Filippo Inzaghi or Alberto Gilardino — because most of AC Milan’s scoring in the Champions League this season has come from Kaka. The Brazilian leads the competitions with 10 goals — two more than he scored in the Italian league season.
On Merseyside they like to remember it as the ”Miracle of Istanbul”; in Milan they would just like to forget it. If the 2005 Champions League final is ever recalled in the red-and-black heartlands of Lombardy, it is with the kind of shivery discomfort usually associated with the aftermath of a particularly unpleasant dream.
The captain of a cruise ship that sank in the Aegean Sea has been charged with negligence, and searchers have failed to locate two missing French passengers. The Sea Diamond had been carrying 1 154 tourists and 391 crew members when it hit a reef off the volcanic Greek island of Santorini on Thursday.
Navy divers early on Saturday searched the sunken wreckage of a cruise ship for the bodies of a Frenchman and his daughter who disappeared after the vessel foundered on a volcanic reef — the only two people missing despite what passengers described as a chaotic evacuation in the Aegean Sea.
Greece on Friday suspended all team sport matches for two weeks after a fan died in a pitched battle outside Athens, an incident casting doubt on measures taken against the violence that has plagued sport in the country for decades. The 25-year-old fan was killed in an arranged clash between about 300 hooligans of Greek arch-rivals Olympiakos Pireaus and Panathinaikos Athens.
Greek Cypriots razed to the ground a symbol of Cyprus’s decades-old division running through the heart of the capital Nicosia and challenged Turkey to respond by withdrawing its troops from the area. Demolition work on a concrete barrier in Nicosia’s Ledra Street ceased by dawn on Friday, exposing a corridor of crumbling buildings untouched for decades.
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/ 12 January 2007
Suspected leftist guerrillas fired a rocket at the United States embassy in Athens on Friday but no one was hurt in the blast, police and government officials said. In the most serious attack against the mission in 10 years, the small rocket launched from across the street shattered windows and woke up nearby residents in the central Athens area at 5.58am.
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/ 12 January 2007
An explosion ripped through the United States embassy compound in central Athens on Friday but no one was hurt, a US embassy spokesperson said. Greek anti-terrorist officers were on the scene and investigating. It was not clear what caused the blast.
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/ 30 October 2006
A year after the United States narrowly avoided a bruising row with the rest of the world over control of the internet, round two of talks on the web’s future opened in Greece on Monday in a United Nations-sponsored forum on internet governance. Over 1 000 internet experts from 90 countries are participating in the forum, established by the Tunis World Summit on the Information Society.
Two women have been arrested in Cyprus on suspicion of sorcery and fraud after allegedly swindling gullible victims by convincing them they were sick and cursed, local media said on Friday. In one case, a Greek Cypriot woman was arrested after bilking 496 000 Cyprus pounds (-million) from a bank clerk between May 2005 and July 2006 after convincing the woman she was cursed.
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/ 16 September 2006
Tyson Gay surged ahead in the last half of the race to win the 100m in 9,88 seconds and Sanya Richards broke the 22-year-old American 400m record at the World Cup on Saturday. Taking advantage of the absence of the world record co-holder Asafa Powell, who chose to run only in the relay, Gay ran very close to his personal best of 9,85.
Greek health and fire authorities on Friday braced for a three-day heatwave expected to set in over the weekend, with temperatures scheduled to hit 42 degrees Celsius over parts of mainland Greece. In Athens, municipal and prefectural officers warned residents to avoid unnecessary travel during daylight hours.
Set against a rugged landscape dotted with towering villages, Frankish castles, Byzantine churches and beautiful beaches, Mani, on the southern Peloponnese coast of Greece, can literally be described as being at the edge of the world. Visitors will be left in awe of its contrasting landscapes.
Cramped housing conditions and air pollution in Athens have given rise to a "super breed" of mosquito that is larger, faster and more adept at locating human prey, a Greek daily reported on Tuesday. Athens-based mosquitoes can detect humans at a distance of 25m to 30m, unlike their colour-blind counterparts, <i>Ta Nea</i> daily reported.
Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis is to sign an accord with Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul establishing a crisis management hotline between the two countries’ air forces, the Greek Foreign Ministry said on Thursday. ”The agreement has been elaborated, now it is a matter of signing it,” Greek Foreign Ministry spokesperson George Koumoutsakos said.
A Greek inquiry into a mid-air collision between Greek and Turkish fighter planes this week blamed Turkish pilot error, a Greek official said on Friday, as the country confirmed the death of its pilot. The Turkish plane ”rammed into the Greek aircraft overhead following a wrong manoeuvre by the Turkish pilot”, a top defence ministry official said.
Anti-poverty campaigner and Live 8 organiser Sir Bob Geldof accused China on Monday of being responsible for the continuing civil war in Sudan’s Darfur region. The Irish rock star said China was protecting the Sudanese government because it provides 6% of China’s oil.
The Orthodox Church of Greece has decided to keep on public display the corpse of a monk found partially decomposed after 15 years of burial, a discovery that has drawn hundreds of believers to a monastery in central Greece, the church said on Wednesday.
What started as a dream for 23-year-old Natalia quickly turned into a nightmare. ”I wanted to come to Greece, to go to the islands. They bought me and now I am doing this. They’ve told me that they’ll kill me if I try to escape,” she says, before rushing off towards the hotel where one of her sex-trade clients is waiting.
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/ 13 January 2006
Never a laughing matter in Greece, death is even more grave for the country’s non-Orthodox communities, whose shortage of sanctioned burial grounds has long been compounded by legal restrictions. "Discrimination against non-Orthodox believers in Greece also applies in cases of death," says Dede Abdulhalim, an activist of the Muslim minority.
A strong undersea earthquake measuring 6,9 on the Richter scale rocked southern Greece on Sunday, according to the Athens observatory, causing at least two injuries and property damage. The quake struck at 1.34pm local time between the islands of Kythira and Crete about 215km south of Athens.
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/ 12 December 2005
Athens’s main Syntagma Square was rocked by a makeshift explosive device early on Monday that sprayed shattered glass and debris over a wide area, a police source said. The Eleftherotypia daily had received an anonymous phone call about a bomb 30 minutes earlier, the source said.
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/ 24 October 2005
A restaurant owner in the western Greek port of Patras on Monday began efforts to grill his way into the <i>Guinness World Records</i> book by making the world’s largest kebab. Costas Dasios early on Monday began roasting a pork kebab weighing about 1 850kg on a 1,73m steel skewer.
Former Greek Defence Minister Yannos Papantoniou said on Monday that he would take legal action against an allegation that French defence group Thales was prepared to pay him an illegal sales commission. Papantoniou, now a Socialist opposition member of Parliament, was responding to allegations made by a former executive at Thales, Michel Josserand.
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/ 29 September 2005
The deaths of five people during a night of clashes on the Spanish-Moroccan border on Thursday once again threw into focus the growing pressure exerted by illegal immigration on the gateways into the European Union across the Mediterranean Sea.
A Cypriot plane that crashed in Greece killing all 121 people on board likely suffered a catastrophic air-pressure problem before running out of fuel, the head of the Greek investigation team said on Monday. Akrivos Tsolakis also said that someone tried to land the stricken aircraft after its pilots were incapacitated.
At least six of the 121 people killed on Sunday in Greece’s worst air disaster were alive when the jetliner plunged into a mountain outside Athens, autopsies revealed on Monday night. The Helios Airways Boeing 737 crashed into mountains near Athens, killing all 115 passengers and six crew on a flight from Larnaca to Prague with a stop in Athens.
The Cypriot airline that owned the plane that crashed into a Greek mountain on Sunday, killing all 121 people on board, grounded all of its aircraft on Monday. Helios Airways said no flights would be operating from Cyprus, despite earlier reports that it was operating a normal schedule.
A plane that crashed into a Greek mountain on Sunday, killing all 121 people on board, including dozens of children, may have been brought down by decompression or lack of oxygen in the cabin, incapacitating the pilots. Two Greek air force F-16 fighter jets were scrambled when the Cypriot plane lost contact with air-traffic controllers in Athens.
All 121 people aboard a Cypriot airliner died on Sunday after it smashed into a wooded hillside near Athens after air-force pilots said the crew of the Boeing 737 appeared ”doubled up” in the cabin. Greek television broadcast footage of the smouldering wreckage of the plane, with its tail fin sticking out of the earth, as firefighters searched for bodies among the smoking wreckage.
To become a cleric in the Orthodox Church in Greece, it’s necessary to be a man, single or married — but not, heaven forbid, a politician, an actor or a gynaecologist. The church’s ruling synod says that people from certain professions will make most unsuitable clergymen.