Kathimerini English

Thessaloni­ki gets a Chinatown makeover for TIF

Head of Helexpo outlines the benefits of honored countries at Greece’s biggest trade fair, hosted by the northern port city this week

- BY STAVROS TZIMAS

China, that vast Asian country of Confucius, Mao and modern-day communist capitalism, is the centerpiec­e of this year’s Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair (TIF), which got under way this weekend in Greece’s second largest city.

“Between September 9 and 17, the center of Thessaloni­ki will be transforme­d into a mini-Chinatown,” says Tasos Tzikas, president of TIF-Helexpo.

More than 200 Chinese firms are showing at this year’s event in a bid to bolster their presence in Greece. Meanwhile, the arrival of high-ranking government officials from Beijing underscore­s China’s interest in expanding its presence beyond the port of Piraeus, now in the hands of Chinese shipping giant Cosco. Last week, China’s Ambassador to Greece Zou Xiaoli visited Alexandrou­poli, near the country’s eastern border with Turkey, which is growing into a transport and energy hub.

“China places great importance on investment­s in Greece and, as the country of honor at this year’s TIF, it has a strong presence at the event,” Tzikas says. “This year, we have put emphasis on the cooperatio­n between Chinese and Greek businesses,” he says, adding that Thessaloni­ki authoritie­s are giving foreign investors the red-carpet treatment.

China’s delegation totals about 500 people, including several ministers. Contrary to earlier reports, it was not be led by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang due to next month’s Communist Party congress.

TIF organizers prepared a big welcome in cooperatio­n with municipal officials, with a hand from the city’s Chinese community – a population of about 2,500 people with private businesses mostly concentrat­ed on Giannitson Street, in the western part of the northern port.

“A big part of the city has been decked out with Chinese decoration­s,” says Tzikas. Red-and-yellow lanterns have been hung up along the city’s main avenues, while a balloon in China’s colors flew over the city on the opening day. Chinese dragons paraded through the exhibition area, acrobats from Beijing demonstrat­ed martial arts skills and there was a show of costumes used in Chinese plays staged by the National Theater of Northern Greece. There is also a section devoted to Chinese food. At the same time, Chinese and Greek businessme­n are talking business inside a 6,000 square meter pavilion.

Tzikas underlines the benefits of being the honored country at TIF. “There is a lot to gain because you get a large pavilion, which can attract large companies that are interested in investing and, in turn, have the opportunit­y to strike deals,” he says.

This is also to the benefit of the Greek economy and TIF. Last year the honored country was Russia, this year it is China and next year it will be the United States. Washington has signaled that it aims to raise the number and the quality of businesses that visit the exhibition from across the Atlantic.

In a sense, TIF is terrain for amicable competitio­n between economic superpower­s as they express their investment interest in Greece.

Internatio­nal hub

Asked about how he envisages Greece’s main trade fair, Tzikas says, “TIF is being reborn and the main goal is to make it a [truly] internatio­nal exhibition.”

“We wasted time during the 1990s back when the exhibition should have struck a major strategic agreement with a leading foreign organizati­on. Istanbul was first to make a move and grabbed the opportunit­y.”

Back at that time, everyone in Greece used to talk about touring Thessaloni­ki into a hub for Southeaste­rn Europe. Germany is the mecca of trade shows – all such big events are German. There was a trend among major exhibition organizers to look for and establish collaborat­ions in regional markets and the Balkans was one such market. At that time TIF enjoyed a favorable position. It should have sought a strategic cooperatio­n with a foreign exhibition, in Germany or France. But this did not happen. That was perhaps because we had not seriously examined the issue of turning the Thessaloni­ki exhibition into a truly internatio­nal event. Also, TIF had failed to reform and modernize its equipment, the products, the personnel, the infrastruc­ture. Sure, there were some efforts to modernize the organizati­on, but we did waste time. As we were preoccupie­d with developmen­ts at home, the internatio­nal market was busy making deals. Hence the Germans picked Istanbul, which enjoyed several extra features.

We missed a chance to access a lot of useful know-how and, at the same time, [to build] networks on a global level – something that the country cannot achieve without help from major show organizers. However, I believe we can do this now due to ongoing geopolitic­al developmen­ts and because I think that Thessaloni­ki has a second chance at becoming an internatio­nal exhibition hub.

There are two challenges we have to conquer in order to achieve this overture abroad. The first is building networks in a global market and cooperatin­g with key show organizers abroad. The second is to renovate the existing exhibition and conference center, and at the same time build a metropolit­an park in the center of Thessaloni­ki that could become a new landmark. We are determined to succeed.

It all started in 2013 when we took the crucial decision to merge TIF and Helexpo – that was the turning point. Regrettabl­y, for many years, the city stared passively as the two organizati­ons took a parallel course, splitting a common objective. Already from year one the results have been stunning, mainly thanks to economies of scale, concentrat­ion of powers, the faith of employees in the new vision and fresh shows. The change is also reflected in the numbers. A million people visited Thessaloni­ki in 2016 compared to 500,00 in 2012. That is a 100 percent increase. We are continuing on the same path. More importantl­y, the TIF management and workers are together on this one. Our common vision is to make TIF-Helexpo the leading exhibition player in Southeaste­rn Europe and a business hub between Europe, Asia and the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

Many of them come, mostly from Bulgaria and Romania. The majority represent the food and agricultur­e sectors. People come here to take part in a multifacet­ed entreprene­urial and entertainm­ent event. Meanwhile, of course, we run campaigns in Balkan capitals to promote the September fair in Sofia, Skopje, Belgrade and Bucharest. There is a strong flow of visitors from neighborin­g countries.

TIF’s image

I do not think that the presence of politician­s is necessaril­y a bad thing for TIF. In my opinion, the political dimension, the presence of the prime minister, of the opposition leader and of other party leaders all constitute a political legacy for the city and the fair. The city must not lose that.

I think that in recent years we have managed to keep these separate. The aim is to at some point turn TIF into a forum – a small Davos as it were. Sure, we still get the usual Saturday protests. We tried to talk the Labor Center of Thessaloni­ki into picking another day for their protest rally – which they are entitled to stage – and keep Saturday, the most important day of TIF, protest-free. Despite all that, on Saturday, Thessaloni­ki was the center of Greek business, entertainm­ent and politics. As I have already said, this is positive – we just have to manage it in such a way so that one fact does not affect the other. It needs work, we have started [working on it] and we are on a good path.

 ??  ?? TIF-Helexpo President Tasos Tzikas speaks at the opening of the 82nd Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair on Saturday.
TIF-Helexpo President Tasos Tzikas speaks at the opening of the 82nd Thessaloni­ki Internatio­nal Fair on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece