Kathimerini English

Leaders clash over lawlessnes­s

Mitsotakis spars with Tsipras over gov’t toleration of crime at universiti­es and vows to scrap asylum law

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In what was seen as a preview of the acrimony to come in the period leading up to next year’s election, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis crossed swords in Parliament yesterday, with the latter accusing the government of deliberate­ly turning a blind eye to lawlessnes­s on Greek university campuses.

Mitsotakis implied that the government has refrained from cracking down on lawlessnes­s in order to saddle the next government with the problem. “The state either remains idle or openly flirts with the protagonis­ts of violence,” he told Parliament, and described life on university campuses, making reference to drug dealing, trade in contraband goods and the abuse by criminals of the so-called asylum law which makes it difficult for police to enter university grounds. He also described “notorious collective­s” which “control many university faculties,” turning them into “a haunt for hooded individual­s.”

The ND leader reiterated his party’s pledge to abolish the asylum law. “The law on asylum will not just change – it will be abolished. And universiti­es will have the same protection afforded to any other public space,” he said.

The debate on the issue focused on a relevant question tabled by Mitsotakis, who argued that a report published by an Education Ministry committee essentiall­y presented the eradicatio­n of crime as an unattainab­le goal.

In his response, Tsipras admitted that there is a crime problem but refuted claims of outright lawlessnes­s and a lack of policing. “There is no lawlessnes­s in the country,” he said, and accused Mitsotakis of using the issue of crime in a bid to tap into the votes of the far-right and tarnishing the reputation of the country’s universiti­es. He also cited a report by the University of Macedonia, which he said shows that lawlessnes­s has decreased since the current government took over in 2015, noting previous government­s had failed to solve the problem. He further defended the asylum law, saying it does not forbid police from entering university grounds when a crime is being committed – it only requires that university authoritie­s alert police to any incident.

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