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Articles by Gilda Lyghounis

Chrysi Avghì

Greece: Chrysi Avghi, the darkest side of the crisis

Gilda Lyghounis | 18 May 2012 ita

After the failure of negotiations for a new government, Greece is going back to the polls on June 17th. Many eyes are on the neo-Nazi movement Chrysi Avghi ("Golden Dawn"), that has taken advantage of the crisis and attracted consent with violent anti-migrant rhetoric, reawakening eery ghosts from the past. A portrait of the party and its leader, Nikos Michaloliakos



La prima pagina del quotidiano Eleftherotypia

The economic crisis shuts down Greek newspapers

Gilda Lyghounis | 31 January 2012 ita

The historic daily Eleftherotypia has not been published for over a month. It is not the only one: at least 15 newspapers in Greece have shut down or cut staff, among which is the authoritative To Vima



The Piraeus

Is Greece going to be saved by China?

Gilda Lyghounis | 20 June 2011 ita

Greece has not emerged from its economic crisis. If the European Union stops signing " blank cheques” in order to save Greece, many Greeks will start hoping that China soon becomes a lifebuoy to keep them afloat. In the meantime, economic relations between Athens and Bejing keep increasing at a very fast pace, even if relations between the two countries has some friction



Crete, landscape enricod/flickr

Greece-Turkey, interwoven destinies

Gilda Lyghounis | 27 April 2011 ita

With the Lausanne Treaty (1923) that put an end to the armed conflict, Greece and Turkey started a epoch-making population exchange, destined to transform the two countries. Today, in a different political climate, the descendents of many 'Turks from Greece' search for their families' places of origin



Danubio

Back to the Danube

Gilda Lyghounis | 25 March 2010 ita

For over a century, Greek shipowners were the absolute lords of the Danube river. Their ships once carried goods from the Black Sea to Europe, but practically disappeared by War War II. Today, in spite of the serious economic crisis, Greece is trying to regain its role



Greece: the crisis will do us good

Greece: the crisis will do us good

Gilda Lyghounis | 4 January 2010 ita

In an exclusive interview with Osservatorio, Serafeim Fyntanidi, director of Eleftherotypia, one of Athens's most influential dailies, talks in-depth about the economic and social crisis besieging Greece. He says he is convinced that the country will emerge from the crisis stronger.



Destination: Greece

Destination: Greece

Gilda Lyghounis | 20 August 2009 ita

Two thousand years ago, pirates held Julius Caesar captive on Farmakonisi, a big rock in the middle of the Aegean Sea. Today migrants land on the small, uninhabited island before transfer to the crowded Greek detention centres



Erin Brockovich in Greece

Erin Brockovich in Greece

Gilda Lyghounis | 15 May 2009 ita

Erin Brockovich arrived in Greece to save the Asopus river, contaminated with high levels of hexavalent chrome, the same heavy metal that the American legal assistant had fought against in California



Konstantina's tenacity

Konstantina's tenacity

Gilda Lyghounis | 6 March 2009 ita

She came to Greece seven years ago as a migrant. Ever since, she has been fighting for the rights of the "modern slaves", the cleaners. Until a dramatic attempt to silence her forever. This is the story of Konstantina Kuneva, the symbol of 8 March in Greece



Obama for Cyprus

Obama for Cyprus

Gilda Lyghounis | 14 November 2008 ita

The US President-elect Barack Obama has stated several times his opinion on the long-lasting Cyprus issue. Even before his election, he noted that the divided island needed a politically negotiated solution. This statement is long overdue



Bitter Salad

Bitter Salad

Gilda Lyghounis | 11 June 2008 ita

With an official inflation rate of 4.4 percent (highest in the European Union), a real rate estimated at 6 percent, and food prices rising at 7 percent annually, Greece risks becoming the most expensive country in the EU. Most Greek families suffer from the crisis



In December 1989, 20 years ago, Timişoara citizens fought alone against the regime of Ceausescu. The memories of Ioan Savu, one of the leaders of that revolution, and professor Miodrag Milin, the first to collect the stories of those days. A videoreportage by Davide Sighele and Francesco Martino

Philosopher, dissident, politician. Zhelyu Zhelev has been the first Bulgarian president democratically elected after the fall of the Berlin Wall. A videointerview [Bulgaria, 2009]

progetto di: riga promosso da: riga con il sostegno di:
Fondazione Opera Campana dei Caduti Forum Trentino per la Pace e i Diritti Umani Provincia autonoma di Trento Comune di Rovereto