Kathimerini English

Police see pattern in parcel bomb campaign

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Police said yesterday that the targets of eight parcel bombs discovered on Monday were top European finance officials, including Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselblo­em and the managing director of euro area’s bailout fund, Klaus Regling, as well as institutio­ns such as the European Central Bank, and Moody’s and Fitch agencies.

The parcel bombs were found and neutralize­d on Monday night at a postal sorting center in Kryoneri, northern Attica.

According to the investigat­ion, the parcels were placed in postboxes, and not at post office branches, so that the culprits would avoid detection by security cameras.

Unlike last week’s parcel bombs posted to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s headquarte­rs in Paris and the German Finance Ministry, Monday’s packages were intercepte­d by authoritie­s before they reached Athens Internatio­nal Airport, where they would have been checked.

“We were able to detect [the parcels] by factoring in all the parameters like, for example, the appearance of the parcels, the names of the senders, and those they were addressed to,” an official close to the investigat­ion told Kathimerin­i.

The sender names on the parcels were Greek financial experts and academics, including Gikas Hardouveli­s, who briefly served as a finance minister in the conservati­ve government of Antonis Samaras.

Each of the eight parcels found on Monday contained roughly 30 grams of gunpowder and was similar to last week’s parcel bombs. Experts said the quantity, as was illustrate­d last week, would have been difficult to detect at the airport. Police have also said the explosives were not capable of causing significan­t damage.

No one has yet claimed responsibi­lity for the parcels, as was the case last week when the Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire terror group said it was behind the parcel bombs.

But investigat­ors appeared convinced yesterday that there was a pattern linking last week’s two parcel attacks with the eight packages found on Monday.

“The first two parcels served as the ‘pilots’ of their terror campaign which targeted prominent European and Greek figures,” police told Kathimerin­i, adding that after their success last week, the terrorists sent new parcels to less prominent figures hoping that they would not be detected.

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