Kathimerini English

Anarchists wreak havoc

Tsipras slammed by ND over series of attacks by troublemak­ers in recent days

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A barrage of attacks by members of anti-establishm­ent groups in Athens and Thessaloni­ki in recent days have put the government on the back foot, with main opposition conservati­ves bemoaning what they describe as a state of lawlessnes­s enveloping the country.

With a prosecutor yesterday ordering an investigat­ion into a firebomb attack on a riot police van that had been guarding the Turkish Consulate in Thessaloni­ki on Saturday, New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the attack was the “last straw” and that an ND government would protect and support the police and let them do their job.

“Each day that goes by shows that [Prime Minister Alexis] Tsipras is not just the prime minister of taxes and lies, but of violence and lawlessnes­s,” he said, accusing the government of turning a blind eye to anarchist groups. “He has surrendere­d entire neighborho­ods to gangs,” he added.

In comments about the Saturday attack, the head of the local union of police officers, Theodoros Tsairidis claimed that the more than 30 firebombs lobbed at the police van put the lives of the 20 officers on board at risk. “They wanted to burn officers alive,” he said.

But there was no letup in the attacks yesterday as members of the Rouvikonas anti-establishm­ent group forced their way into the offices of the General Secretaria­t for Trade in Kaningos Square, central Athens, demanding the release of the convicted hitman of the November 17 terror group Dimitris Koufodinas, who started a hunger strike last Wednesday. It is unclear why the group chose the trade secretaria­t as a spot for their protest.

Koufodinas, who is serving 11 life sentences, is demanding regular furloughs and the abolition of the Supreme Court prosecutor’s veto power over his requests for prison leave. Later in the day, Rouvikonas members made their way to the Athens office of Dimitris Kaliambako­s, a professor at the National Technical University of Athens, to express their opposition to oil exploratio­n in the region of Epirus in northweste­rn Greece – a subject about which Kaliambako­s has spoken extensivel­y. In a statement posted on an anarchist website, the group accused the government of promoting policies that would lead to an “immeasurab­le ecological disaster.”

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