Difference between revisions of "2009"

From Phantis
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 58: Line 58:
 
*[[June 22]]: The Greek extremist group [[Revolutionary Sect]], claims responsibility for the fatal shooting of officer Nektarios Savvas in a proclamation contained in a CD disk left for Greek daily [[Ta Nea]].
 
*[[June 22]]: The Greek extremist group [[Revolutionary Sect]], claims responsibility for the fatal shooting of officer Nektarios Savvas in a proclamation contained in a CD disk left for Greek daily [[Ta Nea]].
 
*[[June 24]]: [[Panathinaikos FC|Panathinaikos]] acquire striker [[Djibril Cisse]] from Olympique Marseille for 8 million euros.
 
*[[June 24]]: [[Panathinaikos FC|Panathinaikos]] acquire striker [[Djibril Cisse]] from Olympique Marseille for 8 million euros.
 +
*[[June 26]]: The wife of a Greek shipowner Aris Theodorides was freed unharmed, a week after being kidnapped outside her home in [[Athens]] after her family paid an undisclosed ransom. Reports said the woman was released unharmed in the early hours after her family paid a ransom of 1.8 million euros.
  
 
==Deaths==
 
==Deaths==

Revision as of 20:20, June 26, 2009

Events

January

February

March

April

May

  • May 1: Panathinaikos defeat Olympiakos 84-82 in their Euroleague semifinal matchup in Berlin.
  • May 2: Olympiakos win the Greek Football Cup on penalties, after a 4-4 thriller of a final match against AEK.
  • May 3: Panathinaikos defeat CSKA Moscow 73-71 and win their fith Euroleague title.
  • May 5: Greece's parliament votes against indicting a former minister Aristotelis Pavlidis in a corruption probe that could have forced early elections on the embattled conservative government. The vote over an alleged bribery scandal fell short of the 151 ballots required with only 146 lawmakers voting in favor and 144 against.
  • May 7: A first instance court on Rhodes issues a ruling nullifying a pair of same-sex marriages conducted last June on the isle of Tilos.
  • May 8: Olympiakos Piraeus announces the club are not renewing the contract of coach Ernesto Valverde despite the Spaniard leading the club to the league title and Greek Cup.
  • May 8: Former Greek transport minister, Christos Verelis, resigns his seat in parliament after a prosecutor ordered a corruption probe into a bus contract to Neoplan, a subsidiary of German truckmaker and industrial company MAN AG.
  • May 14: Olympiakos Piraeus play a friendly in Hanoi, losing 1-0 to the national team of Vietnam.
  • May 16: Angeliki Exarchou crushed her national record in the women's 200 breast with a time of 2:27.39 during the first night of long course meter swimming at the Czech Grand Prix. Her performance wiped out the 2:29.44 national mark she set back in 2005.
  • May 18: Greece confirms its first case of H1N1 flu, a student who returned from the United States a few days ago. He was first taken to the hospital by his father in the early hours of the day after experiencing a cough and high fever. After initial tests were conducted, he was told to return home but was later taken by ambulance to the Sismanoglio Hospital after the second test conducted at the Pasteur Institute came out positive, showing he had swine flu.
  • May 18: The United States announces that it is listing Revolutionary Struggle as a foreign terrorist organization after the Greek leftist group attacked US diplomatic and business interests.
  • May 18: Alexander the Great is named "the greatest Greek of all time" in a poll of viewers of Sky TV. Surprisingly, Dr George Papanicolaou wins second place while Theodoros Kolokotronis finishes third.
  • May 29: Former King Constantine, 68, undergoes a successful heart bypass operation at a private hospital in north London

June

  • June 1: Panathinaikos defeat Olympiakos 91-84 and win the A1 basketball championship in Greece for the seventh time in a row.
  • June 4: Greeks and Cypriots, along with other Europeans, go to the polls to elect their MEPs.
  • June 17: 41-year old police officer, Nektarios Savvas, is shot dead in the Patisia section of Athens, while guarding a witness in the case against the Revolutionary People's Struggle.
  • June 20: The Acropolis Museum opens to the public.
  • June 20: Greek-born photo-journalist Iason Athanasiadis is among a number of foreign journalists arrested in Iran following the disputed presidential poll. He was on assignment for the Washington Times where he has been covering the post-election protests.
  • June 22: The immediate closure of Athens daily Eleftheros Typos newspaper and its sister radio station City 99.5 FM is announced after billionaire businessman Theodore Angelopoulos and his wife Gianna Angelopoulou-Daskalaki, the former head of the organizing committee for the 2004 Athens Olympics, decided to end their involvement in publishing.
  • June 22: The Greek extremist group Revolutionary Sect, claims responsibility for the fatal shooting of officer Nektarios Savvas in a proclamation contained in a CD disk left for Greek daily Ta Nea.
  • June 24: Panathinaikos acquire striker Djibril Cisse from Olympique Marseille for 8 million euros.
  • June 26: The wife of a Greek shipowner Aris Theodorides was freed unharmed, a week after being kidnapped outside her home in Athens after her family paid an undisclosed ransom. Reports said the woman was released unharmed in the early hours after her family paid a ransom of 1.8 million euros.

Deaths

January

February

April

May

June