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: Highly successful was the presence of the The Chamber of Com : The Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Dodecanese participa : Those are the ship itineraries for Nisyros at 14/08/2016 and : A video shows the beauty of our island created by Dionysis M : This is the programme of the cultural events for summer 2016 : During the four –day festival, the island of Kos will be flo : A few days ago the Italian journalist and writer Silvia Cala : After almost four years that remained closed, Archaeological : Barista Delivery & traditional Bar is ready to celebrate : “The only thing you should believe in a newspaper is the dat Welcome to the SporadesEverything you need to know, in our guide. Welcome to the North Aegean Islands. Welcome to the Ionian Islands, find informations and recommendations in our Guide. Get to know everything about Evia. Get to know all the Islands of the Dodecanese, with our guide. Find all about the cyclades with our guide.
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Do you have a property portal with a nationwide focus? Publish your database on Realigro.'I hope you’ve not come for the refugee crisis...' Elias Sifakis, the deputy mayor of Kos summoned a weary smile. You must be here for the economic crisis then.' The word crisis is, of course, Greek in origin – krisis, first used it is believed by Hippocrates, to describe the critical point at which an illness turns either for the better, or worse: Hippocrates, who came from Kos, and whose tree under which he sat (or so the tourist brochures say) was only 100 yards from the town hall where Mr Sifakis and I were sitting. 'But honestly,’ Mr Sifakis continued. ‘If you look around you can you see a crisis? For the Greek people, yes. But for visitors coming here, I promise you not.’ Tourism is critical to Kos. 1.1m people a year visit the island, and it accounts for 60 per cent of the local economy. And in recent weeks the island could not have had worst problems. Firstly there was the desperate spectacle of refugees washed up on beaches more usually filled with tourists.
But the vast majority have been processed and have moved on - to Athens, en route for Europe. ‘After all’, as one man put it, ‘why would they stay in Greece?’ And now the economic crisis. Among local people an air of long foreboding has given way to genuine fear. The banks remain closed, and local people form queues at the ATMs to draw their regulated 60 Euros a day. But for visitors there is no limit. And the previous day Mr Sifakis had called a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce, the hoteliers and restaurateurs, reminding them that credit card payments will be accepted from all European banks, ‘and that we must show a nice tourist image of the island. 'Everything’, he went on, ‘is just as it was last week…’ The problem for visitors, Mr Sifakis wishes to emphasise, is not what is actually happening, but what potential tourists might think is happening. In fact, while the bankers, bureaucrats and politicians in Brussels and Athens continued to grapple with the issue, British tourists were doing what the British do best, not clamouring at the ATMs in the fear the money may run out, or desperately trying to secure one of the island’s 70 taxis to get them to the airport, but remaining phlegmatic in the face of any difficulty
, real or imagined - sitting in the cafes lining the harbour, drinking a civilized beer and admiring the view across the untroubled waters to Turkey. Should holidaymakers to Greece be worried about a Grexit? Mediterranean migrant crisis: should I cancel my holiday? Greece: holidaymakers spending as little cash as possible Of course there had been concerns, and precautions taken. Some had stocked up on Euros and pounds – ‘somebody said it was better to bring pounds,’ said one couple. Tourists on Kos (Julian Simmonds) Joanne Linton, 56, and James Birch, 57, ‘partners in crime ‘ from Widnes, had booked their holiday 12 months ago, and watched with mounting concern as the crisis deepened; they had invested in a combination of Euros and a Travel Money Card. ‘Then we were told that there might not be any money in the ATMs so we changed it all to Euros,’ Mrs Linton said. ‘Which lost us sixty pounds.’ David Bone, an environmental manager and his wife Anne, Cultural Heritage administrator at South Downs National Park were only stopping for a night, before picking up a ferry to tiny island of Lipsi – ‘we’ve been going for 19 years.
But don’t tell anybody.’ Seasoned visitors, they always come well furnished with Euros. ‘But that’s because there’s only one ATM on the island,’ explained Mr Bone, ‘and it’s not working half the time anyway.’ Things aren’t quite so serene for the restaurant owners, the people offering boat excursions, the gift shop proprietors sitting in the shade hoping to catch the eye of passing tourists. Greece is studious in its policy of not soliciting. don’t make yourself a victim’, says a sign outside one shop, stating that touting for business is ‘a shame for Greece and our islands’ and urging visitors to ‘fight this “third world” phenomenon. Day Trip Boats at the harbour in Kos Town (Julian Simmonds) Greece, of course, has form in philosophy. And every Greek you talk to on Kos is a philosopher – even the waiters quote Pericles - but also an economist, a politician and a conspiracy theorist…. But Socratic dialogue has given way to a mood of anger, defiance, pride, resentment.
Yes, Greece has made mistakes. Yes, the country was lulled into a false promise of endless loans and unfettered consumerism. ‘We have a saying here’, one man said. ‘If you want to wear golden underpants, you must have a golden arse.’ ‘It’s true, we spent more than we earned.’ But Europe, so the theory goes, has screwed Greece to the ground. It’s all a conspiracy by ‘them’ – Germany, the IMF, the the European banks, the global corporations. A beach on Kos (Photo: AP) ‘They want to drive us down, so they can make Greeks the servants of Europe,’ said Dimitris Troumpas, standing at the ticket kiosk of a pleasure boat offering day trips to Bodrum. ‘Greeks are hard workers; If they can pay us less than they pay the Chinese, the Vietnamese, they will have a cheap labour force.’ You hear this a lot. It’s the conspiracy theory du jour. Or perhaps not a conspiracy theory at all. ‘This country has resources - gas, sun, wind – to be rich. And they want all of it,’ said Vasilys Tseklimas – ‘call me Billy’ – the owner of a harbour front café, Sugar.
‘The Greek people have been humiliated. We don’t want to be dictated to by the Germans. They didn’t win the war, and now they want to do it how? ‘It’s not that we don’t want to pay – we know we must pay, but they want us to pay too much. This is not a reasonable proposal; People gather outside the National Bank ATM in Kos Town, from which Greeks are limited to withdrawal of 60 euros a day (Andrew Crowley) ‘Europe does not want a Socialist government, an anti-austerity government to win, because then what happens in Portugal, Spain, Italy…?’ As an island economy with a flow of tourist euros, Kos had suffered less than Athens and other big cities, Mr Tseklimas said. But that depends on tourists continuing to come. ‘People here are scared. For six years we have lived with this uncertainty. But I can’t live like this. Nobody can live like this.’ Just what, exactly, are the Greeks voting on this weekend? Greek referendum: what will a 'Yes' or 'No' vote mean?
Why are the polls on Greece's referendum so crazy? Both Mr Tseklimas and Mr Troumpas said they would be voting ‘No’ in the referendum called by the Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras for Sunday. ‘We have nothing to lose,’ Mr Troumpas said. ‘In two weeks, if the banks don’t give way we’ll be a member of BRICS.’ For visitors there have been some inadvertent benefits from all of this, of course. 'Words of Greek wisdom' on sale in Kos (Julian Simmonds) James Cormack and Claire Turner from Sleaford in Lincolnshire, had only booked their package tour two days before arriving, on Monday. The manager at the Kos Imperial hotel – a sprawling complex just outside Kos town, with 1,000 beds catering to Russian, German, Benolux and British guests, told me the only cancellations they had had as a result of the crisis were from two Greek families, ‘because they believe that on 60 Euros a day you cannot have a holiday.’ On the other hand, there had been a sharp increase in bookings from Britain over the previous two days, ‘I think because of Tunisia...’