Kathimerini English

Ex-PM Papademos injured by bomb attack in his car

Two others also wounded in explosion

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Counterter­rorism police were on alert yesterday after former prime minister Lucas Papademos was injured, along with two other people, when a parcel bomb exploded in his car in central Athens.

The explosion occurred at around 6.30 p.m. when Papademos opened an envelope in his car, police said.

Papademos, 69, was transferre­d to the capital’s Evangelism­os Hospital with wounds to his legs, arms and stomach. The driver of the car and another man, both Bank of Greece employees, were also hospitaliz­ed with less serious injuries.

According to staff at Evangelism­os, Papademos and the other two victims hurt in the blast were out of danger last night.

Papademos’s condition “is stable and not a cause for concern,” a statement from the hospital said. The two other men were said to have sustained superficia­l injuries but were kept in the hospital as a precaution­ary meas- ure. By late last night it remained unclear who was behind the blast though the methodolog­y was reminiscen­t of a spate of parcel bombs in March. The Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire guerrilla group claimed responsibi­lity for a bomb sent to German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble that did not go off. Another bomb sent to the Paris offices of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund detonated, injuring a worker. Another eight parcels were intercepte­d in Greece.

According to police sources, the device that went off in Papademos’s hands yesterday had been put into a book which had had its pages gouged out, a technique that has been used by guerrilla groups in the past. It had been put in an envelope and mailed to Papademos at the Academy of Athens, of which he is president, sources said. One of the bank employees who had been with him in the car had collected his mail from the Athens Academy offices and given it to him, sources added. The former premier had been sorting through his mail when he opened the package and set off the bomb.

Papademos, a former governor of the Bank of Greece and vice president of the European Central Bank, was prime minister of Greece for six months between late 2011 and the spring of 2012.

Politician­s from across the spectrum were quick to denounce the attack. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who was in Brussels for a NATO summit, condemned the attack and wished Papademos and the other two men a speedy recovery.

Bank of Greece Governor Yannis Stournaras, among the first to visit Papademos in the hospital, spoke of a “cowardly attack.”

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said in a statement that he was “saddened” by the attack on Papademos, who he called “a brave public servant of Greece and Europe.”

New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis called the perpetrato­rs behind the attack “ruthless,” adding that they are “the enemies of our country and of democracy.” Stavros Theodoraki­s, the leader of Potami, called on the public and politician­s to “reflect on who is arming these murderers.”

 ??  ?? Police cordoned off part of central Athens after a parcel bomb went off in a car carrying former premier Lucas Papademos, hurting him and two other people. All three were taken to the hospital and said to be ‘stable’ late last night.
Police cordoned off part of central Athens after a parcel bomb went off in a car carrying former premier Lucas Papademos, hurting him and two other people. All three were taken to the hospital and said to be ‘stable’ late last night.

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