Kathimerini English

PM heralds crackdown on illegal constructi­on

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Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras yesterday reiterated the resolve of his government to knock down 3,200 illegally constructe­d buildings as part of a delayed response to deadly wildfires that killed 91 people last month in a tragedy the authoritie­s have partially blamed on rampant illegal constructi­on in the areas in question.

In a televised speech following talks with ministers and regional officials in the port of Lavrio, down the coast from Mati, the area worst hit by the blazes, Tsipras announced 20 measures aimed at curbing illegal constructi­on on forestland and coastlines. Demolition would begin on 3,200 structures for which final judicial decisions have been issued, he said, heralding the recruitmen­t of 250 regional authority officials to boost the crackdown and the creation of an electronic platform to record illegal buildings. A slow-moving process to draft forest maps will be completed by the end of 2019 and a map of the Greek coastline will be complete by the end of this year, he added.

Tsipras’s comments followed a spate of firings aimed at appeasing a public outcry over the state’s slow response to the fire – after the alternate minister for citizens’ protection and the heads of the police force and fire service were replaced, as was the general secretary for civil protection. But Tsipras and high-ranking ministers have avoided explicitly acknowledg­ing that mistakes were made in the firefighti­ng operation on July 23.

Tsipras again avoided commenting on shortfalls yesterday and instead hit out at the political opposition. “Just as I, from the very beginning, assumed responsibi­lity beyond that correspond­ing [to my role], so I would have expected at least a small bit of self-criticism from those who, along with their families, ran the country for more than four decades – not two, three or five years,” he said.

Tsipras’s comments yesterday were dismissed by the political opposition as a public relations stunt and an ongoing attempt to distract the Greek public from the fact that blame has yet to be apportione­d for last month’s tragedy.

“A wretched prime minister, who refuses to assume responsibi­lity for the criminal lack of preparatio­n, the nonexisten­t coordinati­on and the tragic management of the crisis at Mati, today announced the demolition of illegal structures which should have been done three years ago,” said conservati­ve New Democracy spokeswoma­n Maria Spyraki.

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