Surveillance Figure Named Top Prosecutor
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This is our weekly roundup from Greece.Â
Greece has a new Deputy Prosecutor of the countryâs Supreme Court. Itâs the prosecutor who, during her tenure at EYP, is said to have approved a substantial number of surveillance authorisations â many reportedly lacking thorough examination.
A dubious amendment pwas assed overnight this week. It allows politiciansâ relatives to participate in foreign companies.
An official report on the Tempi accident provides material for a government counter-attack regarding cover-up accusations. Only the report does not say what the government says itâs saying.Â
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Now, this weekâs roundup.
Who gets promoted in the Greek judicial system?
âAnyone who dares to speak the truth gets dragged through the mud,â
emphasised (Opens in a new window) Maria Karystinou, head of the Tempi Victimsâ Relativesâ Association, during an event held at the European Parliament on the Rule of Law and Press Freedom in Greece.Â
During the event, which took place on 15 May and was entitled âJournalism on Trial,â significant issues were addressed, such as the Tempi train disaster, the murder of journalist Giorgos Karaivaz, and the wiretapping scandal.
Preceding the event, in May, Vasiliki Vlachou had been promoted (Opens in a new window) to Deputy Prosecutor of Greeceâs Supreme Court.
Vlachou was the former prosecutor for Greeceâs National Intelligence Service (EYP) during the high-profile surveillance scandal involving wiretaps on politicians, journalists, military officials, and thousands of citizens under the banner of ânational securityâ - widely known as âthe Greek Watergateâ.
During her tenure at EYP, Vlachou is said to have approved a substantial number of surveillance authorizations, many of which reportedly lack thorough examination. Her promotion comes upon recommendation by a senior Deputy Prosecutor of the Supreme Court and places her among nine prosecutors recently promoted to the countryâs top judicial ranks.
The decision has drawn intense criticism, particularly from the PASOK party. In a public statement, the party emphasised that her promotion followed a disciplinary investigation by her successor, raising concerns about conflicts of interest and transparency. PASOK also accused authorities of effectively âburyingâ the surveillance scandal.
Appointed to EYP in May 2020, Vlachouâs term coincided with a dramatic rise in surveillance warrants citing national security grounds. The Hellenic Authority for Communication Security and Privacy (ADAE) data showed 15,475 such authorizations in 2021âup from 13,751 in 2020 and 11,680 in 2019.
Following revelations about the scandal, Athens Bar Association president Dimitris Vervesos had called for disciplinary proceedings against Vlachou. However, she was cleared and resumed her role as head of the Piraeus Court of Appeal Prosecutorâs Office.
She has now joined the Supreme Court.Â
Also worth mentioning is that this week, Supreme Court Prosecutor Georgia Adeilini was selected (Opens in a new window) as the prosecutor for the Judicial Council tasked with concluding the pre-trial phase following the referral of former Deputy Minister Christos Triantopoulos for the offense of breach of duty in relation to the Tempi accident. All members of the Judicial Council were selected by lot in a draw held in the plenary session of the Hellenic Parliament.
Course of Freedom leader Konstantopoulou raised concerns about a conflict of interest, as Mrs Adeilini is the Supreme Court Prosecutor (who, however, is expected to retire soon), and Dimitris Tzanakopoulos from the New Left described the development as negative.
A very dubious amendment
An amendment passed overnight this week allows politiciansâ relatives to participate in foreign companies.
More specifically, the bill allows the spouses and first-degree relatives of political figures to participate in foreign companies, provided that those countries maintain a tax cooperation agreement with Greece. Justice Minister Floridis initially admitted that âit is not ideal for any government to legislate through amendments,â but claimed that this specific amendment enhances transparency and clarifies certain issues.
The amendment, which was introduced as part of a bill scheduled for a vote the following day, modifies a 2003 legislative provision that had prohibited political figures (such as the prime minister, MPs, ministers, regional governors, and mayors), as well as âproxy individualsâ (i.e., spouses and first-degree relatives), from holding shares or participating in foreign companies. With this new regulation, the category of "proxy individuals" is removed, thus allowing the relatives of politicians to legally participate in companies abroad without legal consequences.
The amendment has sparked intense backlash from the opposition.
PASOK-KINAL called the overnight legislative maneuver an entirely unacceptable process without clear justification. SYRIZA echoed concerns about poor legislative practices and noted that introducing surprise amendments has become routine, diminishing Parliament's institutional role. KKE pointed out that the amendment could be âtailor-madeâ and noted that previous governments have employed similar practices.
Tempi: The Official report does not shed light on what caused the fireball, the government claims it doesÂ
An official report on the causes of the Tempi train crash was released on Tuesday. Dimitris Karonis, the appointed judicial expert and professor at the School of Chemical Engineering at the National Technical University of Athens, issued the report. It is the second official report commissioned by the judicial authority, specifically, by the special appellate investigating judge handling the Tempi case.
The report was reportedly (Opens in a new window) more like a compilation of assessments and probabilities, based overwhelmingly on data from the Hellenic Police and footage from Interstar, but offers no definitive answers. No clear conclusions are drawn. As Professor Nikos Belavilas wrote: âThis isnât science, itâs public relations: evasive answers and questions open to interpretation.â
Karonis concludes ambiguously that the train engine silicone oils âmight have ledâ to a fireball in complete contradiction to the findings of Professor Konstantopoulos on behalf of the National Organization for Accident Investigation and Transport Safety (EODASAAM).
Immediately after the report was released (so quickly that it raises questions about when they had the time to read its 132 pages), government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis declared that âthe cover-up narrative is collapsing.â He was referring to the widespread belief that the train carried flammable illegal cargo. âThis puts an end to the most blatant and deliberate attempt at misinformation we've seen in years,â he added. âWhen thereâs no illegal cargo, what exactly is someone trying to cover up?â
However, the final sentence of the Karonis report, however ambiguous, does not justify Marinakisâs self-confidence. It says:
âSo, with regard to the combustion, it is reasonable to assume that the silicone oils contributed to the fire due to the high temperatures that prevailed after the development of the fireball.â
In other words, the report says the fireball had already happened when the silicon oils allegedly contributed to it.Â
The government has already managed to spread its side of the story. Â
PASOK pointedly commented, âThey almost demanded we apologise for holding them accountable as the main opposition.â SYRIZAâProgressive Alliance emphasised that âNew Democracy is already condemned in the conscience of the Greek people over Tempi.â The Communist Party of Greece KKE, for its part, highlighted that âthe investigation keeps stumbling over the tampering of the crime scene,â the New Left stated that the case is being approached as a communication tactic both by New Democracy and by opposition parties and Course of Freedom called (Opens in a new window) for criminal investigation into the engineer behind the report.
Maria Karystianou, president of the Victims' Families Association, wrote: âOnce again, shame, anger, and disgust, following the release of the infamous âKaroni Reportâ!â
The victimâs family lawyer commented that the ambiguities in the final phrase we emphasised above, like âreasonable to assumeâ and âparticipated in the fire,â leave unanswered key questions, such as: Who or what else participated?
All in all, the whole debate on what caused the fireball has come to serve the governmentâs need for a shift of what should have been the real focus: the huge government responsibilities on the lack of safety systems in the railway, following the latterâs privatisation - and the need for all those responsible to be punished.
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Ippokratous and Asklipiou: Two streets, infinite microcosms (Opens in a new window)
Young nurse brings kitten back to life with CPR (Opens in a new window)
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The AL team