In a move bound to leave many Greeks and scholars aghast, Greece's culture ministry said Tuesday it will open up some of the debt-stricken country's most-cherished archaeological sites to advertising firms and other ventures.
The ministry says the move is a common-sense way of helping "facilitate" access to the country's ancient Greek ruins, and money generated would fund the upkeep and monitoring of sites. The first site to be opened would be the Acropolis.
Archaeologists, however, have for decades slammed such an initiative as sacrilege. The culture ministry said any renting of ancient Greek sites would be subject to strict conditions.
According to a ministerial briefing dating from the end of December, a commercial firm could rent the Acropolis for a professional photographic shoot for as little as 1,600 euros a day ($2,046). Demonstrators could also rent the ancient landmark.
Greece needs every euro it can get. The country's public coffers are drained and the nation is struggling to avoid a historic debt default in March.
Greece was bailed out in May 2010 by the European Union and International Monetary Fund and is in the process of nailing down a second rescue, though it is undergoing tough talks with private creditors to reduce its massive debt mountain.
Commercial use of Greece's archaeological sites has until now been the responsibility of the Central Council of Archaeology, which has been very choosy about who gains access.
In recent decades, only a select few people, including Greek-Canadian filmmaker Nia Vardalos and the American director Francis Ford Coppola, have been able to use the Acropolis, while most filming and advertising requests have been refused.
Publié le 23.01.2012
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nosubject
Your article is simply wrong and misleading.
There are two different issues confused in your article: 1. photo/video permission fees and 2. rumours about renting out the Acropolis.
Regarding photo/video fees, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism has announced the reduction of fees for filming and photography, which have been reviewed and decided to be lowered. Many countries in the world charge copyright fees for media producers' (photographers, videographers, etc) use of heritage sites.
Regarding the rumours about renting out the Acropolis, these are not true: the Greek Minister of Culture and Tourism, P. Yeroulanos, has stated that any claims by the press that the Acropolis will be rented out are false. (This was tweeted by the Minister himself, Pavlos Yeroulanos @P_Yeroulanos, 18 Jan 2012).
Please research any topic carefully before publishing your articles, otherwise you confuse the issue and affect your credibility dramatically.
Nikolaos Chatziandreou
nchatz
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