-
Pogacar inspired by Djokovic after Tour de France jeers
-
Trump backtracks on plan to toll Hormuz ships
-
Balogun admits red card furore affected US World Cup team
-
France, Spain battle for place in World Cup final
-
Pogacar inspired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
-
Pogacar inspsired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
-
'Gus' the T. rex fetches record $50.1 mn at US auction
-
Croatia ex-international Simic held in graft case
-
Dollar slides as rate hike prospects ease, oil gains moderate
-
Record-smashing US heat wave surges from West to East
-
England won't be drawn into Argentina World Cup rivalry: Kane
-
Why does Brazil's PIX payment system bother Donald Trump?
-
Swiss World Cup squad return home to heroes' welcome
-
Pogacar wins Tour de France 10th stage on Bastille Day
-
Too hot: Buttoned-up Tokyo officials ditch suits for 'cool' shorts
-
US Supreme Court justices defiant as threats hit home
-
Arsenal agree Trossard fee for Beskitas switch
-
Brighton sign Croatia defender Veskovic for record fee
-
France flaunts firepower, unity with allies in huge parade
-
US inflation cools in June before renewed Mideast fighting
-
Ticking time bomb? Europe's ageing population brings challenges
-
India spark collapse before Root leads England to 258 in 1st ODI
-
Oil gains on fresh attacks, dollar slides as inflation slows
-
Dua Lipa backs Albanian protests against Trump-linked resort
-
Fire ravages popular forest outside Paris
-
Dangote's mega oil project threatens fragile Kenyan ecosystem: Greenpeace
-
US consumer inflation cools in June on lower energy costs
-
Rose says there's still time to realise British Open dream
-
Israel says ready to move on pilot zones amid new Lebanon talks
-
Ukraine PM resigns in Zelensky-ordered reshuffle
-
Croatia ex-international Simic held in graft case: report
-
Glasner warns 'no button to press' for Forest success
-
SCANDIC TRADE & SNC SCANDIC COIN:
AI Meets Non-Custodial Trading
-
Swiss probe Google dropping search choice on Android phones
-
France and Spain clash in World Cup semi-final
-
MEXC Reports 7.1 Billion USDT in SpaceX Futures Volume as Q2 Closes the Gap to Wall Street
-
Knight wants England women to play more red-ball cricket after India loss
-
DR Congo health workers on Ebola front line threaten strike
-
Oil extends gains after fresh US strikes
-
Turn off addictive features on social media for children, say EU lawmakers
-
EU population to peak in 2029 before long-term decline
-
Bumrah returns for India as England bat in 1st ODI
-
Fire ravages historic forest outside Paris
-
US strikes Iran, vows to reimpose naval blockade
-
57 gored or bruised during Spain's San Fermin bull runs
-
Oil extends gains after fresh US strikes, stocks mostly rise
-
Wildfires advance in forest south of Paris
-
Families claim bodies as Bangkok fire toll rises to 30
-
Ukrainian men in Poland face legal limbo
-
Egg-free school meals scramble politics in India
German president visits Greek village gutted by Nazi forces
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will on Thursday visit the Greek village of Kandanos in Crete, site of one the worst atrocities committed by Nazi occupation forces during World War II.
The German head of state, who is concluding a three-day state visit to Greece, is expected to stress Germany's political and moral responsibility for the massacre of some 180 villagers by Nazi troops on June 3, 1941.
Little known outside Greece, the 1941-1944 Nazi occupation was one of the bloodiest in Europe.
World War II historian Hagen Fleischer has written that "in no other non-Slavic country did the SS and the Wehrmacht operate as brutally as in Greece".
From 1941 to 1944, Greece was bled dry, its population reduced to starvation.
To quell fierce Greek resistance, the Nazis pillaged, burnt, massacred and shot civilians.
In addition, nearly 54,000 Greek Jews, the majority of whom lived in Thessaloniki, were deported to Auschwitz, and 90 percent of the Greek Jewish community was exterminated, according to historian Mark Mazower in his seminal book "Inside Hitler's Greece".
The Third Reich also imposed a forced loan on Greece's central bank, which was never repaid.
In an interview with Greek daily Ta Nea this month, Steinmeier said it was important to "keep this terrible and painful chapter of our history alive".
"It is all too easy to forget," he warned.
The German president, who is on his fourth visit to Greece, is due to meet survivors of the massacre at Kandanos, some 50 kilometres (31 miles) southwest of Chania.
The village was razed in retaliation as its inhabitants had taken part in the Battle of Crete, a desperate effort by Allied forces to repel the airborne invasion by Nazi paratroopers in May 1941.
At the village, which was later rebuilt, a commemorative plaque put up by the invaders as a warning still stands: "In retaliation for the bestial murder of a platoon of paratroopers and half a platoon of pioneers by armed men and women in ambush, Kandanos was destroyed."
- 'War crime' -
Steinmeier has termed the massacre a "war crime" for which the commanding officer Kurt Student was never convicted.
Student was captured by the Allies and briefly jailed but was released in 1948.
Meeting with Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou in Athens on Wednesday, Steinmeier said brutalities committed by the Nazis constitute "a difficult subject that plays a role in our relations, and which we must not sidestep".
But he quickly ruled out any discussion on reparations, an issue that still rankles the Greeks.
"The question of reparations is closed for our country under international law," he said.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, whose family hails from Crete, on Wednesday said the reparations issue is "still very much alive".
"We hope that at some point we will resolve them," the Greek premier said.
The issue resurfaced at the time of the Greek financial crisis, when Germany was seen to be at the fore of European creditors demanding harsh cuts in return for loans.
Five years ago, a Greek parliamentary committee estimated the cost of reparations at more than €270 billion ($293 billion).
Germany has never compensated Greece and insists that the issue was definitively settled in 1990 before its reunification.
Steinmeier's predecessor, Joachim Gauck, was the first German head of state to apologise to Greece, expressing "shame and suffering" during a 2014 visit.
D.AbuRida--SF-PST