Era of austerity is over: Tsipras

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras speaks during a Parliament session about the bailout negotiations in Athens, on Friday. (AP)
Updated 25 February 2017
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Era of austerity is over: Tsipras

ATHENS: Greece’s era of austerity is over, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras claimed Friday, as he painted a positive picture of the reforms his government has agreed to take after the bailout program ends in 2018.
Speaking in Parliament, Tsipras described the deal reached Monday as an “exceptional success” and said it showed the country’s creditors accepted Greece’s insistence that it could no longer bear further budget austerity.
“I am fully convinced we achieved an honorable compromise,” Tsipras said, adding that all sides at the euro zone finance ministers’ meeting in Brussels had agreed for the “first time after seven years ... to leave the path of continued austerity behind us.”
On Monday, Greece agreed to legislate new reforms to come into effect in 2019, but said these will be fiscally neutral: For every euro’s worth of new burdens on the Greek taxpayer, an equal amount of relief will be granted.
In return, Greece’s creditors agreed to send their bailout inspectors back to Athens next week for further talks to complete a long overdue review of Greece’s progress in its bailout program.
Greece’s central bank chief warned Friday that the bailout talks must be concluded as soon as possible.
“If the negotiations drag on with no agreement in sight, then Greece will enter a new cycle of uncertainty, deteriorating relations with our partners and creditors and a backsliding of the economy into stagnation,” Yannis Stournaras said in a speech.
He warned that risks “also arise from delays and procrastination in implementing reforms already agreed on, or from distortions to competition that could hurt crucial sectors of the economy.”
Tsipras said both the new measures requested by creditors and the government-proposed relief measures will be legislated at the same time.
The prime minister’s left-led coalition government, trailing badly in polls, has presented Monday’s deal as a decisive, positive step forward for austerity-weary Greeks hammered by seven years of financial crisis that plunged the country into an economic depression.
No details have been provided of what the new reforms will entail, although there is widespread speculation they will include a broadening of the tax base and further pension and labor reforms.
Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos has provided no details of the upcoming reforms. Government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos on Tuesday said no specifics could be given as the reforms are subject to negotiation and agreement with the country’s creditors.
Greece has depended on three international bailout funds since 2010, when it became locked out of bond markets by sky-high borrowing rates.
In return for the rescue loans, it has had to overhaul its economy, imposing rounds of spending cuts and tax hikes. The austerity saw the economy contract by more than a quarter and sent unemployment soaring. The jobless figure now hovers at around 23 percent, down from a high of 27 percent.


Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea dolphins signal a thriving marine environment

Updated 30 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea dolphins signal a thriving marine environment

  • Long-term monitoring aims to turn observations into data for conservation

JEDDAH: The waters of the Red Sea along Saudi Arabia’s coast have become a vibrant natural stage, with pods of dolphins appearing near shorelines and along shipping lanes. These captivating sightings are emerging as a positive indicator for the health of the Red Sea’s marine ecosystem.

Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea waters are a thriving sanctuary for marine life, hosting 12 species of dolphins and small whales, according to the National Center for Wildlife.

Nearshore and reef-adjacent waters are frequently visited by the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) and the spinner dolphin (Stenella longirostris). Common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) are also present, but tend to favor deeper offshore waters.

Beyond these familiar faces, the Red Sea is home to a wider array of cetaceans that are less often documented. These include the Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (Sousa plumbea), which inhabits shallow coastal areas, the pantropical spotted dolphin (Stenella attenuata), Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus), and larger relatives such as the false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens), which may be more common than sightings suggest. Rare visitors like killer whales (Orcinus orca) and offshore species such as the rough-toothed dolphin (Steno bredanensis), striped dolphin (Stenella coeruleoalba), long-beaked common dolphin (Delphinus capensis), and short-finned pilot whale (Globicephala macrorhynchus) are known to appear sporadically but require documented evidence for confirmation.

DID YOU KNOW?

Pods of dolphins are regularly spotted near shorelines and shipping lanes along Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast.

Reef-enclosed lagoons and sheltered nearshore waters serve as resting and social hubs for dolphins.

Human activities, including fisheries, coastal development and vessel traffic, can disrupt dolphin behavior.

Field identification is made easier by distinct physical traits. Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins are smaller and more slender than their common bottlenose cousins, while spinner dolphins are streamlined with a pronounced beak. Risso’s dolphins are stockier with blunt heads, often marked with noticeable scars. Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins remain close to shallow, sometimes murky, shorelines, making them challenging to document without dedicated surveys.

Researchers at KAUST emphasized the importance of ongoing conservation to maintain the Red Sea’s ecological balance. Research scientist Jesse Cochran told Arab News: “For Saudi waters, the biggest challenge is that we still don’t have the kind of long-term, standardized monitoring needed to estimate population sizes or trends confidently. We have important observations and some targeted surveys, but the baseline is still developing.”

Another research scientist, Royale Hardenstine, highlighted the need for broader coordination: “What we need most right now is connectivity across efforts. There are good observations in specific project areas, but without a shared framework and a broader network, it’s hard to turn those observations into coast-wide inferences about residency, movements, or trends.”

Dolphins are frequently seen in reef-enclosed lagoons and sheltered nearshore waters, where they rest and socialize. These locations are often predictable, as reef structures reduce wave action and currents, creating calm conditions favorable to dolphin behavior.

Christy Judd, a Ph.D. student at KAUST, noted: “Some reef-bounded lagoons appear to be used repeatedly as resting areas. These places matter because they offer shelter and calm conditions, not because they’re automatically the highest biodiversity sites.”

While dolphins sometimes feed and socialize near coral reefs, Prof. Michael Berumen explained that their ecological range extends well beyond reef systems. Dolphin activity in the Red Sea spans a wide seascape that includes open waters, channels, continental shelf edges, and coastal zones.

He said that reefs shape resting areas and can concentrate prey. Experts, however, caution against linking dolphin presence directly to reef health.

Hardenstine elaborated: “Where dolphins and reefs overlap, it’s often because reef structures create sheltered lagoons and predictable resting areas.”

Dolphin group sizes in the Red Sea vary by species and activity. Bottlenose and spinner dolphins may form large aggregations exceeding 100 individuals during social interactions or when moving through food-rich waters.

In contrast, Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins are more often observed in small groups. Mixed-species associations also occur: Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins may interact with bottlenose dolphins, and pantropical spotted dolphins frequently accompany spinner dolphins.

From left: Dr. Michael Berumen, Christy Judd, Royale Hardenstine and Jesse Cochran. (KAUST)

Berumen described these social dynamics: “Dolphin societies are typically dynamic, with groups that form and re-form over time (often described as ‘fission-fusion’ social structure). Individuals associate for feeding, travel, resting, and social interactions, and alliances can form, particularly in some bottlenose populations.”

Judd added a field perspective: “Calves are usually integrated into the pod’s normal behavior, but groups with calves can be more cautious, especially around disturbance.”

Seasonal patterns in dolphin distribution remain unclear. Hardenstine noted: “In Saudi waters seasonal patterns, if they exist, are not yet well-resolved because sighting data are often influenced by survey effort, weather, and where people are looking.”

Dolphins respond to prey availability, water temperature, and oceanographic features such as currents and productive zones. Cochran cautioned: “We expect environment and prey to influence where dolphins are seen, but data limitations mean we should treat seasonal conclusions as provisional until long-term monitoring is in place.”

Human activities pose additional pressures. Dolphins face risks from fisheries, occasional bycatch, coastal development, tourism, vessel traffic, and underwater noise. While the Red Sea does not experience the intensive industrial fishing seen in other regions, interactions with fisheries can displace dolphins or disrupt the marine food web. Vessel traffic can disturb resting behavior and increase stress.

Berumen explained: “Vessels can affect dolphin behavior by causing avoidance of certain areas, interrupting resting behavior, altering movement patterns, and increasing stress, particularly in areas where dolphins rest in sheltered lagoons.”

Hardenstine added: “While data related to these impacts in the Red Sea are sparse, some anthropogenic pressures are increasing throughout the region. This is exactly when collaborative monitoring and scientifically informed mitigation become most valuable.”

KAUST researchers study dolphins as part of broader ecosystem and megafauna monitoring, combining reef surveys, opportunistic sightings, and targeted research. The university collaborates closely with the Saudi Arabia’s National Center for Wildlife to develop a national marine mammal stranding network, assisting with identification, sampling, and necropsies when needed. Collaborative efforts with NCW and OceanX have also supported aerial surveys documenting Red Sea megafauna.

Cochran emphasized the goal: “The most responsible next step is building long-term monitoring that is coordinated between stakeholders nationally, so that observations turn into defensible data that can identify trends and guide conservation actions or policy.”