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Row over composer spills over
The US was drawn yesterday into a storm over controversial remarks by Greece’s most famous composer, condemned by Israeli and Jewish officials as anti-Semitic. This followed yesterday’s attack by Greek government spokesman Christos Protopapas on US Ambassador in Athens Thomas Miller, for criticizing Mikis Theodorakis. “Particular care is required of people who have a specific mission in Greece and whose duties, in our opinion, do not include criticizing remarks by Greek citizens — especially when these remarks do not concern the country they represent,” Protopapas said. Miller told private Antenna TV on Wednesday that he found it “sad and regrettable that a man of [Theodorakis’s] stature makes... those kinds of comments” — referring to the composer’s contention, at a November 4 book launch: “Today we may say that this small nation is at the root of evil and not of good.” Theodorakis said he had been speaking of Israeli government policies. A State Department spokesman commented yesterday that “it is not wrong to speak out about anti-Semitism.”
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