14 May 2021 11:26am
The 11-month-old baby of a British-Filipino woman brutally murdered in Greece during a burglary was found crying, say reports.
Baby Lydia watched her mother Caroline Crouch, 20, being tortured for an hour before being strangled after intruders broke into their hope at Glyka Nera, a suburb of Athens, before dawn on Tuesday.
A post-mortem examination has shown that the mother may have been strangled with her own t-shirt.
Her 32-year-old husband Charalambos Anagnostopoulos, a civil aviation pilot, begged intruders to leave his family unharmed. He was tied up and handcuffed with duct tape over his eyes and mouth as the three burglars searched the property for valuables before killing his wife and hanging the family dog by its own leash as a fourth accomplice kept watch outside.
Global economic recovery from pandemic to take at least two years: Athens forum Xinhua | Updated: 2021-05-14 09:36
ATHENS The global economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic will take at least two years, officials and experts told an economic forum held in Athens and online. Recovery will take time. Economy cannot start simply by pressing a button. It will take two years, British-Cypriot Nobel laureate economist Christopher Pissarides said on Thursday while addressing the Delphi Economic Forum VI. We will return to a kind of normalcy in 2024 at the latest, Gunther Oettinger, former European Commissioner for Budget and Human Resources, said.
Serbia and Greece close to cancelling roaming fees euractiv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from euractiv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Source: Socialist Republic of Vietnam
“Recovery will take time. Economy cannot start simply by pressing a button. It will take two years,” British-Cypriot Nobel laureate economist Christopher Pissarides said on Thursday while addressing the Delphi Economic Forum VI.
“We will return to a kind of normalcy in 2024 at the latest,” Gunther Oettinger, former European Commissioner for Budget and Human Resources, said.
Compared to the financial crisis which broke out in 2008, this time recovery will be faster, but it will be nothing like turning on a switch, said Barry Eichengreen, a professor of economics and political science at the University of California, Berkeley.
holidaymakers from Serbia during his meeting with Serbia’s Prime Minister,
Ana Brnabić, who is in Greece attending the 6th Delphi Economic Forum this week.
“We look forward to welcoming tourists from Serbia to Greece this summer,” said Mitsotakis hours before Greece opens to international travelers, adding that the country can “ensure a pleasant, but also a very, very safe stay”.
The Greek PM said Greece was open to all travelers without imposing additional quarantine restrictions on vacationers, who are either vaccinated against Covid-19, or can present negative PCR or antigen test results on arrival.
On her part, Brnabić said