The Hellenic Navy (HN) (Greek: Πολεμικό Ναυτικό, Polemikó Naftikó, abbreviated ΠΝ) is the naval force of Greece, part of the Greek Armed Forces. The modern Greek navy has its roots in the naval forces of various Aegean Islands, which fought in the Greek War of Independence. During the periods of monarchy (1833–1924 and 1936–1973) it was known as the Royal Navy (Βασιλικόν Ναυτικόν, Vasilikón Naftikón, abbreviated ΒΝ).The total displacement of all the navy's vessels is approximately 150,000 tons.The motto of the Hellenic Navy is "Μέγα το της Θαλάσσης Κράτος" from Thucydides' account of Pericles' oration on the eve of the Peloponnesian War. This has been roughly translated as "Great is the country that controls the sea". The Hellenic Navy's emblem consists of an anchor in front of a crossed Christian cross and trident, with the cross symbolizing Greek Orthodoxy, and the trident symbolizing Poseidon, the god of the sea in Greek mythology. Pericles' words are written across the top of the emblem. "The navy, as it represents a necessary weapon for Greece, should only be created for war and aim to victory."...............The Hellenic Merchant Marine refers to the Merchant Marine of Greece, engaged in commerce and transportation of goods and services universally. It consists of the merchant vessels owned by Greek civilians, flying either the Greek flag or a flag of convenience. Greece is a maritime nation by tradition, as shipping is arguably the oldest form of occupation of the Greeks and a key element of Greek economic activity since the ancient times. Nowadays, Greece has the largest merchant fleet in the world, which is the second largest contributor to the national economy after tourism and forms the backbone of world shipping. The Greek fleet flies a variety of flags, however some Greek shipowners gradually return to Greece following the changes to the legislative framework governing their operations and the improvement of infrastructure.Blogger Tips and Tricks
This is a bilingual blog in English and / or Greek and you can translate any post to any language by pressing on the appropriate flag....Note that there is provided below a scrolling text with the 30 recent posts...Αυτό είναι ένα δίγλωσσο blog στα Αγγλικά η/και στα Ελληνικά και μπορείτε να μεταφράσετε οποιοδήποτε ποστ σε οποιαδήποτε γλώσσα κάνοντας κλικ στη σχετική σημαία. Σημειωτέον ότι παρακάτω παρέχεται και ένα κινούμενο κείμενο με τα 30 πρόσφατα ποστς....This is a bilingual blog in English and / or Greek and you can translate any post to any language by pressing on the appropriate flag....Note that there is provided below a scrolling text with the 30 recent posts...Αυτό είναι ένα δίγλωσσο blog στα Αγγλικά η/και στα Ελληνικά και μπορείτε να μεταφράσετε οποιοδήποτε ποστ σε οποιαδήποτε γλώσσα κάνοντας κλικ στη σχετική σημαία. Σημειωτέον ότι παρακάτω παρέχεται και ένα κινούμενο κείμενο με τα 30 πρόσφατα ποστς.........

Saturday, January 16, 2010

South Stream..[ 550 ]

World

Work on South Stream pipeline may start in fall - Zubkov

Work on South Stream pipeline may start in fall - Zubkov

BERLIN, January 16,,, (RIA Novosti) 12:15,,16/01/2010

Preparatory work ahead of the construction of the South Stream pipeline could be completed by the fall of 2010, Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov said on Saturday.

The South Stream project, designed to annually pump 31 billion cubic meters of Central Asian and Russian gas to the Balkans and on to other European countries, involves Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Italy and Greece.

The pipeline's capacity could be eventually increased to 63 billion cubic meters annually.

"By September-October, exploratory work will be completed, and all the documentation may be ready to allow us to begin work on South Stream by the autumn," Zubkov told journalists in Berlin.

The gas pipeline is expected to start operating in late 2015. The project is part of Russia's efforts to cut dependence on transit nations. It is a rival project to the EU-backed Nabucco, which would bypass Russia.


Haiti earthquake last news...[ 549 ]

Haiti says 200,000 may be dead, tensions rise

Sat Jan 16, 2010 1:48am EST
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PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Tensions rose among desperate Haitians awaiting international aid and food that began to trickle in three days after an earthquake that Haitian authorities say killed 200,000 people.

Haiti's shell-shocked government gave the United States control over its main airport to bring order to aid flights from around the world and speed relief to the impoverished Caribbean nation.

Trucks piled with corpses have been carrying bodies to hurriedly excavated mass graves outside the city but thousands of bodies still are believed buried under rubble.

"We have already collected around 50,000 dead bodies," Interior Minister Paul Antoine Bien-Aime told Reuters. "We anticipate there will be between 100,000 and 200,000 dead in total, although we will never know the exact number."

Some 40,000 bodies had been buried in mass graves, said Secretary of State for Public Safety Aramick Louis.

If the casualty figures turn out to be accurate, the 7.0 magnitude quake that hit Haiti on Tuesday and flattened much of its capital city would be one of the 10 deadliest ever.

Health Minister Alex Larsen told Reuters three-quarters of Port-au-Prince will have to be rebuilt.

Three days after the earthquake struck, gangs of robbers had begun preying on survivors living in makeshift camps on streets strewn with debris and decomposing bodies, as aftershocks rippled through the hilly neighborhoods.

Authorities reported some looting and growing anger among survivors despairing over the delay in life-saving assistance. Meanwhile, the United States and other nations rushed to deliver food, water and medical supplies through a jammed airport, a smashed seaport and roads littered with rubble.

FIGHTING FOR FOOD

Hungry residents fought each other for bags of foods handed out by U.N. trucks in downtown Port-au-Prince.

A senior U.N. official warned that hunger will fuel trouble if aid does not arrive promptly, although the law and order situation remains under control "for the time being."

"There have been some incidents where people were looting or fighting for food. They are desperate, they have been three days without food or any assistance," U.N. Undersecretary General for Peacekeeping, Alain Le Roy, told "The PBS NewsHour."

"We have to make sure that the situation doesn't unravel but for that we need very much to ensure that the assistance is coming as quickly as possible so that the people who are dying for food and medicine get them as soon as possible."

The U.N. mission responsible for security in Haiti lost at least 36 of its 9,000 members when its headquarters collapsed. Its two top officials have not been accounted for.

The weakened Haitian government was in no better position to handle the crisis. The quake destroyed the presidential palace and knocked out communications and power.

President Rene Preval and Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive were living and working in the judicial police headquarters.

"I do not have a home, I do not have a telephone. This is my palace now," the president told Reuters in an interview.

"We have to make sure there is gas available ... for the trucks collecting the bodies. The hospitals are full, they are overwhelmed."

U.S. PROMISE

U.S. President Barack Obama, who pledged an initial $100 million in quake relief, promised the United States would do what it takes to save lives and get Haiti back on its feet. "The scale of the devastation is extraordinary ... and the losses are heartbreaking," Obama said at the White House.

Obama said the United States, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, France, Colombia, Russia, Japan, Britain and other countries managed to fly in rescue and logistics personnel and supplies. While some aid was getting in, the White House hoped improved logistics would streamline and accelerate the effort.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was due to visit on Saturday to meet with Preval at the airport. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will travel to Haiti on Sunday.

Planes and ships arrived with rescue teams, search dogs, tents, water purification units, food, doctors and telecom teams, but faced a bottleneck at the small airport.

Air traffic control, hampered by serious damage suffered by the airport's tower, will now be handled by the U.S. military with backup from a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

The USS Carl Vinson with 19 helicopters arrived off Haiti on Friday opening a second significant channel to deliver help. Navy helicopters had begun taking water ashore and ferrying injured people to a field hospital near the airport.

The U.S. military aimed to have about 1,000 troops on the ground in Haiti on Friday and thousands more in ships offshore. The total will reach 9,000 to 10,000 troops by Monday.

NO WATER, NO SUPPLIES

The Pan American Health Organization said at least eight hospitals and health centers in Port-au-Prince had collapsed or sustained damage and were unable to function.

"We have no supplies. We need surgical gloves, antibiotics, antiseptic, disinfectant," said a doctor, Jean Dieudonne Occelien. "We have nothing. Not even water. We have children out here with dry mouths and no water to give them."

Police were scarcely seen on the streets and although some Brazilian U.N. peacekeepers were patrolling, there were reports of sporadic scavenging, some looting and one report of gunshots in downtown Port-au-Prince on Friday.

At one collapsed supermarket, scores of people swarmed over the rubble to try to reach the food underneath. Just outside the Cite Soleil slum, desperate people crowded around a burst water pipe jostling to drink from the pipe or fill buckets.

Raggedly dressed survivors held out their arms to reporters touring the city, begging for food and water.

(Reporting by Joseph Guyler Delva in Port-au-Prince, Patrick Worsnip at the United Nations, Phil Stewart, Andrew Quinn and John Crawley in Washington; writing by Anthony Boadle; editing by Bill Trott)

Russian year's first spacewalk...[ 548 ]

Science & Technology

Russian cosmonauts exit ISS for year's first spacewalk

Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov

(RIA Novosti)14:59,, 14/01/2010

Cosmonauts Oleg Kotov and Maxim Surayev on Thursday moved through an airlock on the International Space Station to start the first spacewalk of 2010.

Wearing Orlan-MK computerized spacesuits, the Russians were scheduled to spend 5 hours and 40 minutes outside the orbiter.

Though their major technical tasks will be to connect cables between the Poisk and Zvezda modules, install docking targets and Kurs aerials and attach additional handrails to exit hatches, Kotov and Surayev also have to remove the Biorisk-MSN experiment from the exterior of the ISS.

The container has been in position for 30 months and will be returned to Earth in the spring to allow scientists to study the effects of space flight on microorganisms as part of research into the problems of ecological safety and planetary quarantine.

MISSION CONTROL (Korolyov, Moscow Region), January 14 (RIA Novosti)

Friday, January 15, 2010

Japan, MSDF refueling mission ...[ 547 ]

The Mainichi Daily News

End of MSDF refueling mission raises questions over Japan's national interests

(Mainichi Japan) January 15, 2010....

Japan's termination of the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) refueling mission in the Indian Ocean has raised questions over repercussions on national interests.

In Japan, the refueling mission received a cool reception from some critics, who described it as a "free ocean gas stand", but at the same time concerns have been raised that diminishing Japan's presence could hinder the nation's ability to obtain information relating to the war on terror.

"There is a possibility that terrorist information could become harder to come by and it will be a big loss in terms of Japan's national interests," said one former MSDF chief of staff, speaking anonymously.

Under the refueling activities and measures to combat piracy off the coast of Somalia, the Ministry of Defense sent local liaison officers -- who conversed with naval forces from various countries -- to Tampa, Florida, the location of the U.S. Central Command, and to Bahrain, the location of the multinational naval force headquarters. Japan's forces had shared terrorist-related information with several dozen countries, including information pertaining to Afghanistan and Iraq.

However, Japan's withdrawal from the refueling mission means that some of the liaison officers will have to return to Japan, and concerns have been voiced within the Ministry of Defense that access to information vital for Japan's security will drop markedly as a result of the move.

Anti-terrorist activities were launched in 2001 following the terrorist attacks in the United States that year. The International Security Assistance Force, established under a United Nations Security Council resolution, has roughly 70,000 members from 45 counties including the United States, Britain, France and Germany. In addition, 26 Provincial Reconstruction Teams led by 14 countries are operating in Afghanistan, and eight countries including the United States have launched a combat mission dubbed "Operation Enduring Freedom." Part of this is Operation Enduring Freedom-Maritime Interdiction Operation, a monitoring operation aiming to hinder the movements of terrorists and the shipment of illegal drugs. Currently five to six countries are taking part in the operations, and the MSDF had provided fuel and water to those countries' vessels.

For the MSDF, whose activities face many restrictions, refueling was seen as a "low-risk, high-return" venture that would be highly valued by international society, with a low risk of becoming involved in fighting.

At the same time, the activities placed a high strain on MSDF members, some of whom were sent overseas as many as seven times with each mission lasting four to five months. The overall cost of refueling stood at about 24.4 billion yen as of the end of October last year, but refueling had gradually been decreasing each year, and in some months refueling was performed only once. Accordingly, some Defense Ministry workers had questioned the effectiveness of such activities in relation to the high cost.


Russia & U.S. poultry....[ 546 ]

Russia

Russian producers say ready for ban on U.S. poultry

More on this topic
Russian producers say ready for ban on U.S. poultry
RIA NOVOSTI , 16:03, 15/01/2010

Russian producers are ready for the potential ban on U.S. poultry imports, a spokeswoman for one of Russia's largest meat manufacturers said on Friday.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin warned the United States on Thursday that Russia could find other poultry suppliers if U.S. companies fail to meet the country's sanitary requirements.

Tougher sanitary regulations regarding poultry processing that restrict the use of chlorine and moisture content came into force in Russia January 1. U.S. companies have traditionally used chlorine in poultry processing and will not be able to supply their products to Russia any longer.

"Russian [poultry] producers will increase output and they were ready for [the ban] on the back of earlier forecasts on lower import quotas," Irina Ostryakova from Cherkizovo Group said.

She said Petelinka, one of Russia's key poultry producers and a Cherkizovo subsidiary, had long used air chilling in poultry processing and refused to comment on substitutes for U.S. chlorine-treated chicken.

Ostryakova described the government motion as pro-Russian.

"We are just taking the path Europe has chosen to improve production," she said referring to the ban on chlorine-rinsed poultry that has been in place in Europe since 1997.

Galina Bobyleva, general director of the Russian Poultry Union, also welcomed Putin's proposal.

"This is certainly a cause for celebration, that quality requirements for imports are being raised," she said.

She dismissed speculation that the ban would cause a poultry deficit on the domestic market or any price hike.

"We currently have huge reserves of unsold products," Bobyleva said.