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[King Constantine joins Bulgaria's King Simeon (now
prime minister), Romania's King Michael, Yugoslavia's
King Presumptive Alexander and Albania's King Leka
(son of Hitler's and Mussolini's ally King Zog) in
finding NATO-occupied Southeastern Europe a congenial
spot to return to...and reclaim their domains in.]

More than anything...he had been emboldened by the
European court of human rights' judgment last year
compelling the Greek government to compensate him for
the royal estates it confidcated in 1994, reputed to
be worth about 225m [pounds].



Ex-king Constantine plans Athenian return 
Helena Smith in Athens
Tuesday September 4, 2001
The Guardian

Encouraged by other monarchs returning to their
homelands, the exiled king of Greece is planning to
resettle in the country that deposed him in 1974. 

Constantine II, who was stripped of his Greek
citizenship in 1993, plans to arrive on a Danish
passport. He is married to Anna-Marie, the younger
sister of the Danish Queen. 

Disregarding the open hostility of his former
subjects, Constantine, 60, has taken courage from the
return to Bulgaria of former King Simeon II, now the
country's prime minister, and the restoration of the
property of the Yugoslav monarch, Crown Prince
Alexander. 

Yesterday he revealed his determination to reinstate
himself permanently in the Greek capital by the end of
next year. He has already begun house hunting. 

Constantine left Greece in 1968 and has lived in
London most of the time since then. He was deposed in
a popular referendum after the seven-year dictatorship
of the Colonels, which he initially supported,
collapsed. 

"He is desperately homesick, there is no doubt about
it," an old friend told the Guardian yesterday. "He is
no different to other people who identify with the
place where they spent their childhood. He lived here
until he was 27, and he dreams of Greece every day." 

A former Olympics sailing gold medalist, he is looking
for a spacious villa in Athens and a country house
where he can enjoy the sea, the friend said. 

The Greek media reported yesterday that he had shown
an interest in a plush Athenian mansion which once
belonged to his mother, Queen Frederika. It now
belongs to Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the Cypriot owner of
Easyjet airlines, who commented: "No contact has been
made so far ... in any case, the house is not for
sale." 

Although Constantine has apologised for the past, he
has not relinquished his claim to the throne. When he
was visiting Greece in the early 90s his yacht was
chased out of territorial waters by gunboats and
fighter planes. 

It is clear that the prospect of his return has caused
the Socialist government deep unease. An official said
it was acutely aware of the embarrassment of trying to
stop him entering the country on a Danish passport. 

Aides who have recently visited Constantine at his
house in Hampstead told the Greek press that he
believed the time was right to make his return. 

More than anything, they said, he had been emboldened
by the European court of human rights' judgment last
year compelling the Greek government to compensate him
for the royal estates it confiscated in 1994, reputed
to be worth about �225m. 



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