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Pelasgia

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CARIA'S LARGEST ENGELSH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER · EST. A.D. 1954

Government considers easing immigration restrictions as demographic crisis worsens
Nauplia, 28 March 2022 | Stephanos Papadakis


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The main building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in downtown Nauplia, Caria

As the demographic crisis of Caria worsens, the incumbent government of the conservative Constitutional Democratic Party has taken the unprecedented step of airing immigration as a means of resolving the country's population-related woes. With a fertility rate of 1.37 births per woman as of 2019, and a median age of 45.2 years, Caria is one of the oldest and least fertile countries in the world. This is sharp contrast to its economic profile, where the Meridian Sea nation of 47 million people boasts a per capita GDP of 40,113 euromarks per resident, totaling over one and a half trillion euromarks for the whole Kingdom. Indeed, the Carian Government has done all it can to use these funds to boost fertility at both the polity and federal level, with both orders of government financing public daycare, maternity and paternity leave, education, healthcare, and even chilrearing-costs programmes. Nevertheless, these steps seem to have done very little in a society where increasingly late marriage and higher educational attainment, coupled with strong social pressures to build a career and work long hours meet with modernisation, individualism, urbanisation, and other trends discouraging procreation. For all their efforts, successive Carian federal ministries seem to have done little to overturn this issue.

Whereas internal migration from more fertile inland regions to more urbanised polities was seen as a solution well into the late 1990s and early 2000s, sub-replacement fertility and growing socio-economic prosperity in those regions has deprived Caria's metropolitan regions of that relatively easy source of new residents. For many economists, immigration would have seemed as the solution to Caria's woes since long ago. But that is not the case in the culturally insular and admittedly somewhat xenophobic nation, whose residents often distrust residents of other polities (states) within the Carian federation--let alone foreigners. Long rocky coasts, faraway islands, a rugged inland, and tall mountainous borders characterise the Carian geography, which, along with a completely distinct language and a separate national confession of Christianity have served to isolate the nation from its neighbours culturally and politically over past centuries. Indeed, Carians, though mercantile and sea-loving by general admission, and hospitable by reputation, prefer to welcome foreigners only for a limited time and only in manageable numbers. It is no surprise that, despite being one of Europe's foremost touristic destinations and leading maritime nations, Caria receives next to no immigrants on an annual basis.

Yet, as demographics worsen, that might be about to change. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has put out a tender for applications for foreigners from across Europe. While this is not novel--as Caria increasingly relies on foreign temporary workers to do low-paid, unskilled labour that Carian businesses have a hard time finding workers for--what is novel is precisely what the tender entailed. Among the 400,000 or so foreigners who come into Caria every year as resident temporary workers, in addition to the 800,000 resident aliens, the Ministry requested applications for some 40,000 immigrants. This is a tiny figure, which is less than a tenth of 1% of the Carian population; and yet it is monumental, precisely because of the strictness of Carian immigration law. Generally, immigrants to Caria are only allowed there if they are married to a Carian or have stable, high-level employment which more than compensates for any benefits they receive from public services via taxes. Moreover, the path to citizenship is effectively closed for those without a parent who is him or herself a Carian national. Even those 40,000 immigrants are more likely to be drawn from culturally proximate countries like Pelasgia, since even Pannonians (seen as easily assimilable in other countries of the region) are far too exotic for most Carians according to recent polls.

That being said, the federal government has also aired the idea of facilitating the naturalisation process. Criteria would include willingness to abandon other citizenships, demonstrated willingness to assimilate into local culture, and a long residency requirement, according to a draft bill circulated within governing party circles. Additional criteria would require some similar assimilation into and approval by the authorities of the polity where the applicant would reside. But, again, by Carian standards this is a shocking development--and one which might not easily go along with great sections of the governing party's base. Caria's dominant party, the conservative Constitutional Democratic Party, has relied on broad middle class support, institutional backing, and business-friendliness to remain in power (with rare exceptions) for the better part of forty years. That being said, while business might favour immigration, the middle class is strongly opposed--and institutional players (who are notoriously both conservative and nationalistic) are split. While opposition parties have varying positions, ranging from that of the Carian Socialist Workers' Party (KSEK), which is strongly in opposed, to that of the All-Carian Progressive Coalition (PAPS), which is strongly in favour, the most interesting one is that of the official opposition--the National Democratic Movement (EDIK). The National Democratic Movement is not so much an ideological party, as it is the party of the opposition of the Constitutional Democrats' power; it has gone through centre-left, hard left, centre liberal, centre-right, and even hard right phases, all based on the election cycle. With a new leadership race in course, between right-wing,anti-immigration populist candidate Anastasios Germanos, and left-wing, pro-immigration candidate Theodora Manou, the National Democrats could either capitalize on the Constitutional Democrats' new immigration policy or they could join forces with the governing party to promote. What will be remains to be seen.

Other Headlines
- (International) Ministry of Foreign Affairs congratulates new Pelasgian Chairman on election but remains mute on new political developments in the country, fearing imperilment of largest neighbour's stability. At the same time, the Ministry condemned continued Pelasgian vilations of the airspace and waters around the Carian frontier island of Hagios Georgios, which Propontis illegally claims.
- (National) Federalism row between federal government and Polity of Navarone regarding polity's carbon tax to be heard by the Supreme Court, following filing by the federal Ministry of Justice challenging the law's constitutionality. Navarone has responded by challenging the federal government's choice to withhold tax funds collected by the Royal Revenue Agency under the tax from the polity's coffers.
- (Religious) Church of Caria reaches settlement with Ecumenical Patriarchate regarding official guidelines on the inclusion of olive oil in the Easter lent guide. The Patriarchate has agreed to recognise that the matter falls within the Carian Church's Charter of Autocephaly, in exchange for a compromise solution leaving the matter to each the faithful.
- (Sports) Asteras Nauplia F.C. beats Atromitos Nikaia F.C. 3-2 in heated derby at the latter's home court, thereby eliminating the Nikaia team. Asteras is now set to face off against Neolcus in the finals for the I National Division's annual league, while Nikaia is veering from the resignation of its coach after the game.

© Copyright 2022 - Nauplia Herald, Ltd. / Ο Ναυπλιωτικός Κήρυκας Ε.Π.Ε.
 
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Pelasgia

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CARIA'S LARGEST ENGELSH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER · EST. A.D. 1954

Government hopes to resolve Hagios Georgios dispute with new Pelasgian leader
Nauplia, 30 March 2022 | Alexandros Psilos


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Pelasgian soldiers leaving their ships to surrender to Carian troops on Hagios Georgios (June 15, 1969)

As the weather in the Meridian begins to warmen up, and the seas start to calm down, Caria and its southern neighbour are poised for another series of military drills revolving around contested landing scenarios on the island of Hagios Georgios. Pelasgian conscripts, drawn to the Himyari coast from all corners of their massive country, are trained to capture the Carian island, over which Propontis claims ownership; their Carian counterparts, who are fewer in number but better equipped and well-entrenched, train in both conventional and unorthodox tactics to oppose and resist against an enemy invasion of the island. Yet, as the decades go by, and Pelasgia's military and economy grow increasingly modern, many think back to summer 1969--and wonder whether the isle could serve as a flashpoint for conflict between the two brotherly nations yet again.

On June 15, 1969, after months of heated dispatches on both sides, the nascent communist regime of the Pelasgian People's Republic launched an amphibious invasion of the Carian island of Hagios Georgios. Using mass tactics, the inexperienced and under-equipped Red Pelasgian commanders hoped to overwhelm the numerically inferior forces of the Royal Pelasgian Army. They nearly did so, save for the intervention of the Royal Carian Air Force and Navy, which made short work of the invading Pelasgians' naval transports, taking advantage of the lack of air support and the relative inexperience plaguing Red Pelasgian naval units. Stuck on the island of Hagios Georgios, upward of ten thousand Pelasgian soldiers were forced to abandon their landing ships and surrender--a humiliating defeat that hastened the end of the Red Terror and the fall of the Hardliners from power in Propontis. The Pragmatists, who would take over and begin modernising Red Pelasgia, would restore full relations with Caria and arrange for an exchange of prisoners of war in 1989. Still, nearly fifty years later, Hagios Georgios remains contested--a matter that Nauplia now hopes to settle once and for all.


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Pelasgian naval ships struck by the Royal Carian Air Force off Hagios Georgios (1969)

Under the Pragmatists, the Pelasgian People's Republic has significantly strenghtened and modernised itself and its economy. A strong military is the natural result of such an expansion. Indeed, whereas in 1969, the Red Pelasgians' forces were little more than mass levies of poorly equipped workers and peasants, along with a few more elite units of Academy-trained Imperial officers and troops who had joined the Reds, the modern Pelasgian People's Army is a well-equipped and well-trained force of regulars and professionals, who are led by officers chosen from among the best and brightest of one of Europe's most populous countries. The Pelasgian People's Navy and Air Force, once barely more than a few boats and antiquated planes left over from the old Imperial military, have since grown to dwarf and outmatch the Carian forces; indeed, the Pelasgians boast that, once again, theirs is the strongest navy in Europe--and they might be right. Add to this the growing importance of Pelasgia for the global economy, as well as its increasing population, and Caria might well find itself with an enemy it cannot hope to outsmart.

The Kingdom of Caria, though an extremely rich and modern economy by all accounts, has been largely stagnant, facing periodic economic crises in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and now seeing a relatively flat economic growth and real income growth curve. Moreover, Caria's population is aging fast, being one of the oldest and least fertile in Europe. Coupled with Carians' world-renowned longevity, this bodes ill for the finances but also the military capacity of the Carian state. It is thus hardly surprising that incumbent Prime Minister Anastasios Kalamaras wishes to settle the matter of Hagios Georgios now and for all. Yet, one side's will is not enough: the Pelasgian Embassy in Propontis has reasserted its country's claim to Hagios Georgios even after Chairman Ioannopoulos was inaugurated. Additionally, the Carian public, bureaucracy, and opposition are all staunchly opposed to granting Pelasgia any concessions on Hagios Georgios--let alone surrendering the territory.

In such a climate, it seems all but certain that the Prime Minister's hopes are ill-placed. Though Foreign Minister Leon Grammatikos and his Pelasgian counterpart, Mr. Anaxandros Koligos, have both voiced hopes for a meeting in the near future, many doubt whether the issue of Hagios Georgios will be tackled at all in order to avoid derailing progress on other subjects. Some in Nauplia instead hope that, as Pelasgia democratises and grows more affluent, Pelasgians' own willingness to go to war with brotherly Caria will decline. Nonetheless, Pelasgians remain quite nationalistic by the standards of most modern societies, while the Pelasgian military retains a tight grip on power, even if it has allowed some limited liberalisation of the country's political system. Thus, for the immediate future, the issue of Hagios Georgios seems poised to remain unresolved.

On Wednesday, the Carian Ministry of Defence reported six violations of Carian airspace around Hagios Georgios and its surrounding islets. Last month, Pelasgian coast guard vessels harassed Carian fishermen, forcing Nauplia to permanently deploy warships to the area. Since then, Propontis has responded in kind, and the two sides' naval patrols have been staring each other down on the frontier of the Carian exclusive economic zone on a near-weekly basis. Many in Caria and elsewhere wonder: will the two countries go to war over Hagios Georgios? Only time will tell.

Other Headlines
- (International) Foreign Minister congratulates Pelasgia on constitutional reforms, multi-party elections; Minister does not restate Carian offer for electoral observers, citing concern that Propontis might see this as foreign interference, as well as past negative response.
- (National) Supreme Court strikes down Navarone carbon tax law as unconstitutional, citing inconsistency with federal legislation. Court reaffirms the right of the Royal Government to enact overarching legislation setting common standards within the fields of competence of the Polities.
- (Politics) National Democratic Movement to hold final debate before leadership vote next week. 57% of respondents favour Germanos, compared to 34% for Manou, and 9% who are still undecided.
- (Business) Train, truck and bus manufacturer Iraklis S.A. abandons plan to move part of manufacturing to Pelasgia following general outcry and threats by Royal Government that the company would lose support from Nauplia. Company's current partnerships with Pelasgian automobile giant Pegasus Motors reportedly unaffected, though future joint initiatives in doubt.

© Copyright 2022 - Nauplia Herald, Ltd. / Ο Ναυπλιωτικός Κήρυκας Ε.Π.Ε.
 

Pelasgia

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CARIA'S LARGEST ENGELSH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER · EST. A.D. 1954

Germanos wins Natl Democratic Movement leadership race, announces daring programme
Nauplia, 4 April 2022 | Theodoros Theotokis


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Τhe National Parliament building, as seen from the Parliamentary Gardens in central Nauplia

The National Democratic Movement or EDIK, Caria's largest and most prominent opposition party, has elected a new leader following the conclusion of its leadership race this weekend. The party's right-wing faction, led by former prosecutor and attorney Anastasios Germanos, soundly won over the progressive faction, led by lawyer and civil rights activist Theodora Manou, with the two factions claiming 62% and 38% of votes, respectively. Mrs. Manou called Mr. Germanos to concede early Monday, just before an official ceremony where the latter assumed the party's leadership. Though she has vowed to continue to support the new party leader in his efforts to meet Carians' demands, many doubt whether the senior EDIK politician would actually remain in politics, given the great gap between the two candidates' policies, as well as the harsh rebuke given to her by voters.

While foreign observers might find such wide discrepancies in policy to be perplexing, this is not so for Carians and for those with knowledge of the Carian political system. Since the last constitutional amendment in 1977, which resulted in a significant victory for centralist elements favouring a more tightly-knit Carian federation, the Kingdom's politics have been dominated by the Constitutional Democratic Party or KSD. KSD operates as a big tent of conservative, nationalist, and market liberal-liberal conservative forces, drawing its power from the large urban middle class, the bureaucratic institutions, the political establishment, and large segments of the business class, while also capitalizing on its own quasi-monopoly of media and institutional support to further cerement its political ascendancy. This has led many to term Caria a dominant-party state, in spite of its nature as a liberal democracy, something which is largely explained by Carians' own political conservatism and preference for stability.

Within this context, the opposition has been reduced to acting more as a valve for popular anger in times of crises than as a real alternative for governing the country. Indeed, in the five times that there has been a non-KSD government since 1977, it has been short lived and characterised by internal conflict, inability to effect its platform, and repeated gaffes which were widely reported and deeply unpopular. EDIK is thus the latest in a series of opposition coalition parties hoping to unseat KSD--but Mr. Germanos hopes to change that. In his inaugural speech on Saturday, the thirty eight-year old from Nauplia hopes to consolidate EDIK as a proper centralised party with a unified agenda, centralised around its leader and the official ideology that he brings with him. Already, Mr. Germanos has submitted a proposal for the party's name to be changed to the National Democratic Party (whose initials would still be EDIK). This largely symbolic move is important due to the way in which Mr. Germanos went about pushing it forward: rather than submitting the plan to the party committee, he has instead put it forth in a referendum among the membership. This move signals a populist desire to appear directly to voters--a trademark of the new political firebrand that is Anastasios Germanos.

Having previously served as a federal prosecutor in the port city of Krini, Mr. Germanos is the illegitimate child of a business executive and his secretary. In a decidedly conservative country where politicians average above fifty years of age, the relatively young and self-made 38-year old has made a name for himself by attacking traditional political norms--and by proudly owning his personal heritage. (One well-known EDIK advertisement features a picture of Mr. Germanos which is captioned "Sometimes, to beat bastards, you need a bastard of your own. Let me be your bastard.") The platform proposed by Mr. Germanos is just as daring and controversial as his branding and heritage: he proposes large tax cuts and the privatisation of pension plans and social security, which he deems a form of "social vampirism" by those in elder generations who had fewer children against those who did and the youth; he rails against bureaucracy and the lack of democratic accountability of established parties; he lambasts initiatives for women's and minorities' rights as rent-seeking behaviour against the "backbone of the country", as he often refers to as working-class ethnic Carian men and families; and supports unabashed nationalism in a country that has been defined by neutrality and pacifism since the end of its own internal constitutional struggles--which often featured foreign meddling--and regional irredentist wars.

Mr. Germanos has even taken aim at the current monarch, H.M. King John III Notaras, whom he identifies as aligning far too much with progressive causes and the liberal conservative wing of KSD. In response to this, Mr. Germanos has aired the idea of either explicitly reducing the monarchy to a purely ceremonial status and stripping it of its prerogative powers; and/or forcing the abdication of the King in favour of the current Crown Prince, who is seen as more palatable, apolitical, and controllable. Even more peculiar is the absence of any conversation of issues of federalism; in a country where complex dynamics between the polities themselves as well as the federal government have led to delicate, high-level conventions and arrangements between elites, Mr. Germanos has instead advocated the sort of mass democracy and populism only seen in unitary states characterised by extreme homogeny. Here too, Mr. Germanos hopes to use the federal government to use the problems of "real Carians"--a term he uses to refer not only to the coastal Carian, Pelasgian Catholic majority, but also to minorities who fall within the disaffected working and middle class elements that form his core constituency, regardless of dialect, geographic region, and denomination.

For most of Carian history, Mr. Germanos and his new EDIK would simply be unelectable, owing to a mix of Carian political elitism and conservatism, as well as his own violation of every single apparent rule of the Carian political playbook. Yet, as the Kingdom faces the combined dangers of demographic and economic stagnation, generational chasms, and an increasingly assertive and rising Pelasgia across the Propontine Straits, the simple solutions offered by the new EDIK leader might be just what the Carian electorate is looking for. Whether, of course, such simplistic solutions would succeed is a different tale altogether; and winning a leadership race is quite different from winning a general election.

Other Headlines
- (International) Carian, Pelasgian foreign ministers agree on increased trade, eased movement restrictions, and various cooperation initiatives--while avoiding the issue of Hagios Georgios almost entirely. Opposition attacks Prime Minister Kalamaras' handling, public divided on issue.
- (National) National Revenue Agency returns monies collected under unconstitutional carbon tax by the Polity of Navarone to taxpayers, with interest, following Supreme Court ruling on the matter. Navarone Governor resigns, leading to premature elections in the insular polity.
- (Religion) Archbishop of Nauplia Athenagoras III passes away at 86 years of age, following heart attack. Holy Synod to convene in Nauplia early next week to discuss selection of successor. King set to give address at state funeral planned for the Archbishop.
- (National) Nauplia High Court rejects appeal of three Zaran refugees seeking reinstatement of refugee status. The trio were deprived of their right to remain in Caria after border officials discovered that they had returned to their country on a two-month vacation.

© Copyright 2022 - Nauplia Herald, Ltd. / Ο Ναυπλιωτικός Κήρυκας Ε.Π.Ε.
 
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Pelasgia

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CARIA'S LARGEST ENGELSH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER · EST. A.D. 1954

Interior Ministry defends surveillance programme in spite of public backlash
Nauplia, 9 April 2022 | Theodoros Theotokis


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Interior Ministry building No. 3, which houses the General and Special Intelligence Directorates

The Ministry of the Interior has defended its recently-uncovered internet surveillance programme titled "TIRESIAS" from widespread public scrutiny. The programme's extent and existence was revealed by the accidental production of a non-redacted document in a parliamentary commission, which was discussing the passage of a new law to strengthen the Carian intelligence apparatus and anti-terror laws. According the copies obtained by the media since, TIRESIAS was a joint programme carried out by Caria's two primary civilian intelligence agencies: the Special Directorate of State Security (EDAK) and General Directorate of State Security (GDAK). Both EDAK and GDAK are technically part of the Royal Carian Gendarmerie, which reports to the Interior Minister, though, in practice, they operate autonomously, with the former handling former handling foreign intelligence and the latter domestic security.

The practice of widespread public surveillance by authorities, though technically legal, provoked widespread condemnation from opposition parties and civil society alike. A large protest was held outside Interior Ministry building No. 3 in Strategos, in northeastern Nauplia, obstructing traffic in the area for upwards of three hours. Moreover, civil society groups, such as the National Association for Political Rights, have organised marches and campaigns across Caria; these include mass calls to telecomms companies to inquire about their collaboration with the authorities, as well as shareholder activism to obtain commitments to enact protective measures against future privacy violations of the kind. Ermis Telecomms S.A. and ATIK S.A., Caria's largest telecomms companies and two of the largest in the region and Europe, have both faced public scrutiny in the aftermath of the crisis.

Politically, newly elected opposition leader, Mr. Anastasios Germanos of the National Democratic Party (EDK), has taken advantage of the situation to lambast the ruling and dominant Constitutional Democratic Party (KSD) of Prime Minister Anastasios Kalamaras as unresponsive to public concerns and undemocratic. This criticism was echoed by virtually all political parties, save for the KSD's parliamentary ally, the hard-right New Popular Party (NLK); yet, even this limited backing might prove to be a curse for the KSD, as the NLK will likely seek to obtain hardline nationalistic concessions to provide its continued support for the government--potentially alienating Prime Minister Kalamaras from the more centrist and liberal wing of his party. With the government's economic revitalisation programmes having produced only limited results, and growing defence and demographic woes, many wonder whether Mr. Kalamaras' own party will seek to replace him with a more palatable candidate before the coming election.

Other Headlines
- (International) Pelasgia voices stern warning against Carian deployment of advanced anti-air systems purchased from the Holy Frankish Empire on Hagios Georgios. @Serenierre, Pelasgia's increasingly close partner, voices concern over trade agreement between Nauplia and Chagny.
- (National) Nauplia Metro refuses to put up ad series showcasing photos of Zaran and Pannonian refugees on the Carian border, citing concerns over its political nature's conflicting with the utility's legally-mandated neutrality.
- (Religion) H.M. King John III Notaras and Crown Prince Theodore give sombre, inspiring addresses during state funeral for Archbishop Athenagoras III of Nauplia. Official appointment of successor by Pontiff expected after selection by Holy Synod early next week.
- (Justice) Supreme Court to hear legal challenge of polity law outlawing "overt sale and advertising" of alcoholic beverages and meat during Holy Week of Easter. Law challenged by National Secularism League, Carian Minority Rights Federation.

© Copyright 2022 - The Nauplia Herald Newspaper Co., Ltd. / Ἐφημερὶς «Ὁ Ναυπλιωτικὸς Κήρυξ» Ε.Π.Ε.
 
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Pelasgia

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CARIA'S LARGEST ENGELSH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER · EST. A.D. 1954

Nauplia to deploy TY3-A battery on Hagios Georgios in spite of Pelasgian threats, domestic protests
Nauplia, 13 April 2022 | Theodoros Theotokis


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The newly acquired TY3-A SAM system firing during air defence exercises on Nydra island

In spite of thinly veiled threats by the Pelasgian Foreign Minister earlier this week, the Royal Government of Caria has decided to deploy one of its four TY3-A batteries to the disputed southern island of Hagios Georgios. The system, which has a range of approximately 30 km, was recently acquired as part of a large weapons procurement agreement with the Holy Frankish Empire. Despite possessing much more advanced systems with a range of more than 10-times that of the TY3-A, neighbouring Pelasgia has voiced its concern against the system's deployment--chiefly due to Hagios Georgios' location, which is a mere 500 km from Thermi, Pelasgia's second largest metropolis. According to Pelasgian officials, the TY3-A's deployment threatens Pelasgian defences by disrupting the aerial and naval shield of the country's own systems--while also partially neutralising Pelasgia's strategic depth doctrine with regard to the Meridian and Basilisk Seas, thereby exposing the Pelasgian mainland to invasion. Hagios Georgios, sovereignty over which has long been disputed between the two countries, is under Carian administration, leading Propontis to allege that it could it be used as the staging ground for such an attack by Caria or its allies.

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Riot police confront protesters at a rally against the militarisation of Hagios Georgios

Nevertheless, Propontis is not alone in its opposition to the island's militarisation. Already, multiple foreign governments and even the Papacy have called for deescalation between the two countries. As the White Archipelago (the part of the Meridian Sea where Hagios Georgios is located) contains multiple critical shipping routes of great importance to international trade, many around Europe fear the economic impact of a hot war, no matter how short, between the two neighbouring nations.

Even more importantly, many Agiogeorgites (that is, residents of Hagios Georgios) are also opposed to the deployment of the system on their island. The local populace, which is largely Pelasgian Orthodox, has always looked at federal institutions, including the military, with suspicion--and many consider the deployment of the system to be a risky move without much clear benefit. According to a recent poll, only 23% of locals fear a Pelasgian invasion, with most citing Pelasgia's growing democratisation and economic growth, as well as cultural proximity between the two peoples, as factors to justify their lack of concern. On the contrary, according to a poll conducted by Palmos Statistics last week, 62% of Agiogeorgites oppose the deployment of a TY3-A battery on their island, generally wishing to avoid provoking Pelasgia. Carian public opinion is similar, with a majority of Carians (57%) being opposed to the system's deployment, and a plurality (49%, with 31% being in favour and the rest undecided) opposing any further militarisation of the island altogether. Business interests are even more opposed, according to reports from insiders.

Politically, this is reflected in growing calls by the opposition and the business wing of the governing Constitutional Democratic Party for the government to scale back its costly rearmament programmes. Several opposition figures seized the chance to take part in anti-war march in downtown Nauplia earlier this week--with the important exception of the new National Democratic Party leader, Anastasios Germanos, and his nationalist wing of the official opposition, who seek to paint the government as too weak. Reports of similar protests in Propontis and other Pelasgian cities have also been publicised, though the communist regime controls public gatherings and journalistic reporting thereof much more tightly. At any rate, a significant part of both countries' populations appears opposed to what many see as a needless war between two brotherly peoples--whether that sentiment will reach the leadership in Nauplia and Propontis is a wholly different matter.

Other Headlines
- (International) Pelasgia launches large scale drills in Meridian, Basilisk seas in a show of force over Hagios Georgios. Nauplia condemns the militarisation of the White Archipelago, responds with own fleet deployment near disputed isle.
- (National) Supreme Court refuses to hear appeal by human rights groups, foreign NGOs regarding legality of Caria's border protection measures to control the inflow of refugees from ex-Pannonia.
- (Religion) Archbishop Bessarion III of Nauplia named Prelate of the Pelasgian Catholic Church of Caria and Cardinal by the Apostolic Exarch of the Tiburan See, following near-unanimous recommendation by the Holy Synod. Ceremony not attended by H.M. the King due to focus on ongoing crisis with Pelasgia.
- (National) Federal Ministry of Education unveils new curriculum following deliberations with state officials, ecclesiastical authorities. Curriculum to lean more heavily into financial and IT education, while also integrating more strenuous physical fitness requirements.

© Copyright 2022 - The Nauplia Herald Newspaper Co., Ltd. / Ἐφημερὶς «Ὁ Ναυπλιωτικὸς Κήρυξ» Ε.Π.Ε.
 
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