Greek PM to form new government [Photo] Mr Karamanlis has a new mandate, albeit with a smaller majority Last Updated: Monday, 17 September 2007, 14:42 GMT 15:42 UK [Photo] [Photo] BBC The Greek Prime Minister, Costas Karamanlis, has been asked to form a new government after his party won Sunday's parliamentary poll. Mr Karamanlis' centre-right New Democracy party won 152 seats in the 300-seat parliament, a loss of 13 seats since 2004. But his main opponents, the socialist Pasok party, also lost ground, falling to its worst result since 1977. The poll was overshadowed by forest fires that killed dozens in August. On Monday Mr Karamanlis met President Karolos Papoulias, who asked him to form the new government. "We are fully aware of our responsibility and we must go forward quickly and with determination to make the country progress," Mr Karamanlis said after the meeting. Under the constitution, Mr Karamanlis has three days to form the administration, which he has said will be smaller and contain "new blood". Electoral change His job of reforming pensions and higher education, included in New Democracy's electoral manifesto, may now be harder given the slim majority in the new parliament - only four more seats than the combined opposition. [Photo] New Democracy polled four percentage points less than in 2004 and lost 13 seats, but analysts say the loss might have been magnified by a change in the electoral system, which is now less favourable to the party that tops the poll. However, Mr Karamanlis is the first conservative prime minister to win re-election since 1977 and conversely, George Papandreou is the first Socialist leader to lose two consecutive elections in the past 30 years. Mr Papandreou has made a speech thanking his supporters for showing their "love and trust" in him, adding: "Pasok fought a battle and lost it." With Mr Papandreou under pressure to resign, former Culture Minister Evangelos Venizelos has already declared his interest in becoming party leader. Fires pledge Mr Karamanlis had been expected to triumph in the poll, after calling elections six months before the end of his term of office. [Photo] George Papandreou is facing a challenge for the Pasok leadership But his support fell when many Greeks felt the government was slow to react to the forest fires, which killed 65 people. However, the BBC's Malcolm Brabant in Athens says the prime minister rallied the nation with a steady, competent and compassionate display during the election campaign. Mr Karamanlis has pledged to use his new four-year term to improve the economy, fight poverty, raise pensions and create a social state for the future. He has also told the victims of the fires that the government's commitment to them would be fulfilled completely. The Papandreou and Karamanlis families have dominated the Greek political scene for most of the past 50 years. But both main parties suffered a fall in votes this year, with the three smaller parties from the far left and right gaining support.
Utah Mormons, Protestants finding new spiritual home in ancient Orthodox church
By BOB MIMS | The Salt Lake Tribune The Salt Lake Tribune It shook the fundamentalist Christian world to its roots: Hank Hanegraaff , the darling of evangelicals as host of the long-running, nationally syndicated "Bible Answer Man" broadcast, had joined the Greek Orthodox Church. Hanegraaff, for nearly 30 years president of the Christian Research Institute, an evangelical apologetics ministry, also has written 20 books opposing purported cults and heresies and non-Christian faiths. If ever evangelicals had a doctrinal superhero, Hanegraaff was he. But on Palm Sunday, in a video released via social media , there was the 67-year-old Hanegraaff kneeling for "Holy Chrismation" — a rite of anointing with oil accompanying baptism — inside St. Nektarios Greek Orthodox Church of Charlotte, N.C. Within days, Bott Radio Network, a 107-station strong, evangelical broadcasting empire, severed its longstanding relationship with him; other criti...
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