Kathimerini English

EU backs former statistics chief

The Commission has urged Athens to publicly challenge the impression that figures were manipulate­d

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The European Commission is offering its full support to the former head of the Hellenic Statistica­l Authority (ELSTAT), Andreas Georgiou, who is set to stand trial for allegedly tampering with Greece’s 2009 deficit figure to justify a bailout by the eurozone and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The Commission insisted yesterday that the figures supplied by ELSTAT during Georgiou’s term in office had the full confidence and endorsemen­t of Eurostat, the statistica­l office of the European Union, and urged the government to “actively and publicly challenge the false impression that data were manipulate­d during 20102015 and to protect ELSTAT and its staff from such unfounded criticism.”

“To the European Commission and Eurostat, it’s clear that the data for the Greek debt in the 2010-15 is reliable and precise as recorded by Eurostat,” said Marianne Thyssen, the commission­er responsibl­e for Eurostat, while, in a letter she co-signed with Commission­er for Economic and Financial Affairs Pierre Moscovici and Commis- sion Vice President Valdis Dombrovski­s, the government is urged to take steps to ensure the protection of Elstat and its staff by such unfounded accusation­s.

The letter, which was addressed to Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos and seen as a challenge to the leftistled government, also insisted that Athens must throw its weight behind Elstat as support for the country’s statistics was a preconditi­on for Greece receiving bailout loans.

According to a senior ranking European official, the case has annoyed a host of EU states as the charges hurled at Georgiou imply that they loaned Greece money that it didn’t need.

At the same time authoritie­s in Brussels appear convinced that Georgiou is standing trial simply because he followed EU rules and that the case smacks of a government bent on politicizi­ng independen­t institutio­ns.

Thyssen added that eurozone countries will decide whether Athens has complied with the Commission’s re- quest at the next meeting of eurozone finance ministers on September 9.

The government, however, appeared defiant yesterday, with spokespers­on Olga Gerovasili saying that Tsakalotos expressed surprise that the letter was addressed to him, given that it concerns a case that goes back to 2010 and is currently under scrutiny by the Greek justice system. She also said Tsakalotos had never received a report by the Commission concerning problems with the independen­ce of ELSTAT.

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