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  1. #1
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    david44's Avatar
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    They've lost their Marbles, Freeze and deliver, Crete expecations

    Dunna Make a Drachma Outta a Cry sis

    Hellenic MP miffed over al Fresco tiff

    The Belgian Murr Ball were bought and shipped to adorn gaff of Pommy Toff and later the Brutish Mueum


    Elgin Marbles row erupts as Greek PM accuses Sunak of cancelling meeting at 11th hour | The Independent

    While Greek owe dosh they have given us

    Nice curds
    Tzitizik
    Gyros
    Retsina
    Ouzo

    While they didnt't a many claim invent Hamasockulaity , they perfected it by using Olive oil rub till poplaur from
    Breezbun to Koaoa Jumpaer BBQ

    Queer ssturmer has intimate he will bend over backwards to cement Bellenic posstions
    Elgin Marbles row erupts as Greek PM accuses Sunak of cancelling meeting at 11th hour

    Kyriakos Mitsotakis left ‘baffled, surprised, and not a little bit annoyed’, source says


    Maryam Zakir-Hussain14 hours ago
    156Comments


    The British government confirmed the meeting had been shelved, as Mr Mitsotakis rejected an alternative meeting with the deputy prime minister.





    The diplomatic spat comes after Mr Mitsotakis had used an interview ahead of the anticipated talks to push for the return of the Elgin Marbles, saying the current situation was like the Mona Lisa painting being cut in half.
    Athens has long demanded the return of the historic works, also known as the Parthenon Sculptures, which were removed from Greece by Lord Elgin in the early 19th century when he was the British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.
    A source on the Greek side said he and his team had been left “baffled, surprised and not a little bit annoyed” at an apparent sudden cancellation, especially when preventing migrant sea crossings - one of Mr Sunak’s top five priorities - was high on the agenda.

    The museum houses the Parthenon Marbles, also known as the Elgin Marbles

    (AFP via Getty Images)
    Labour said that, if Mr Sunak had scrapped the talks because of controversy over the Elgin Marbles, then it showed he “isn’t able to provide the serious economic leadership our country requires”.

    Downing Street, which pushed back against the Greek leader’s Mona Lisa comparison, had earlier indicated that Mr Sunak would reject pleas for the ancient Greek artefacts, on display at the British Museum in London, to be handed back.
    In a statement, a spokesman for Mr Mitsotakis said: “The prime minister is disappointed that prime Minister Sunak cancelled their bilateral meeting at the 11th hour today.


    “Greece and Britain have a very deep history of friendship and co-operation, and the Greek government is extremely surprised by this decision.
    “The prime minister was looking forward to discussing a range of topics of mutual interest including the Israel/Gaza conflict, Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, climate change, as well as common challenges such as migration, and of course the Parthenon Sculptures.”

    The prime minister cancelled a meeting with the Greek PM at the 11th hour

    (PA)
    Mr Mitsotakis, in a statement published on X, formerly Twitter, spoke of his “dismay” that the meeting had been cancelled “just hours before it was due to take place”.




    According to an online translation, he said: “Anyone who believes in the correctness and justice of their positions is never afraid of opposing arguments.”
    On Monday, the prime minister’s official spokesman stressed Mr Sunak’s support for the law that prevents the marbles from being permanently returned and suggested he would not be in favour of any loan arrangement.
    British Museum chairman George Osborne, a former chancellor, has previously said he is exploring ways for the Elgin Marbles to be displayed in Greece, with speculation that this could involve a loan deal in which part of the set would be sent to Athens.
    Asked about such an agreement, Mr Sunak’s spokesman told reporters: “We have no plans to change our approach and certainly we think that the museum is the right place for them.
    “I haven’t asked him specifically about short-term or new ideas that have been put forward, but I think he’s been fairly robust on his position.”
    The official also said the government had “no plans” to change the 1963 British Museum Act which prohibits the removal of objects from the institution’s collection.
    “We have cared for the marbles for generations and our position is we want that to continue. The world comes to the UK regularly to see the marbles and there are no plans to change that or to change the law,” he said.
    Mr Mitsotakis did manage to meet with Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer during his visit to the UK capital.
    Sir Keir had indicated he would tell the Greek premier that a Labour government would not change the law, but that he would not stand in the way of a loan deal that was mutually acceptable to the museum and the Greek government.
    A Labour readout published after the meeting on Monday did not mention the sculptures.
    After Mr Mitsotakis said his meeting with Mr Sunak had not gone ahead, a spokeswoman for Labour said: “If the prime minister isn’t able to meet with a European ally with whom Britain has important economic ties, this is further proof he isn’t able to provide the serious economic leadership our country requires.
    “Keir Starmer’s Labour Party stands ready.”
    On Sunday, Greece’s prime minister argued a return of the sculptures was about “reunification” of the monument. He told the BBC: “It is as if I told you that you would cut the Mona Lisa in half, and you will have half of it at the Louvre and half of it at the British Museum.”
    Asked if Mr Sunak recognised that characterisation, his spokesman said: “Obviously it’s not something we would agree with.
    Quote Originally Posted by cyrille View Post
    been overdoin’ it on the Leningrad Llama cocktails

  2. #2
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by david44 View Post
    “If the prime minister isn’t able to meet with a European ally with whom Britain has important economic ties, this is further proof he isn’t able to provide the serious economic leadership our country requires.
    Sunak is too far up to his ass in alligators to focus on draining the swamp.

  3. #3
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    He told the dego that the decision is for the British Museum, not sure how much clearer he can be - dego spat his dummy

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    Thailand Expat helge's Avatar
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    Just give it back

  5. #5
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    Why?, every one loves a gweek twagedy

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by malmomike77 View Post
    a gweek twagedy
    Not at a Cornish Seal Sanctuary

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    Thailand Expat taxexile's Avatar
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    Lord Elgin, the British diplomat who transported the sculptures to England, acted with the full knowledge and permission of the legal authorities of the day in both Athens and London.

    these marbles were acquired legally, and there is no need to return them. they were bought and paid for, and have been well looked after since.

    but if the brits, want to return them, then it would not be difficult to make exact copies for display in the museum and arrange for the bubble and squeaks to take the originals back to athens, place them in their original location and watch as weather and airborne pollution takes their toll and slowly causes a deterioration in their condition.

    i doubt if any visitors to the british museum would notice the difererence. it would be the same if an exact replica of the mona lisa was on display, nobody would notice, and some actually believe that the mona lisa on display in the louvre is in fact a copy, the original being kept well out of the publics way deep underground in a vault.

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    Quote Originally Posted by taxexile View Post
    deep underground in a vault
    or what paperback writers call a best cellar

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by taxexile View Post
    the bubble and squeaks to take the originals back to athens, place them in their original location and watch as weather and airborne pollution takes their toll and slowly causes a deterioration in their condition.


    That was the ...excuse for the brits to keep them when I went to school some ...many many years ago.

    Still have legs, I see

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