Kathimerini English

Clash over uni asylum

Gov’t and opposition spar in Parliament over new legislativ­e initiative­s

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The government essentiall­y underwent its first crash test yesterday regarding its legislativ­e plans in Parliament.

At the forefront of this legislativ­e push are a provision regarding the abolition of the so-called university asylum and one which seeks to replace the leadership of the Competitio­n Commission.

Both moves have come under intense opposition fire.

Defending the government’s bid to scrap the university asylum, Education Minister Niki Kerameus said yesterday “the objective of our legislativ­e initiative is to restore common sense and to thereby put an end to its distortion and manipulati­on and being turned into an asylum for lawlessnes­s.”

“With these new regulation­s we will strengthen academic freedom and the free movement of ideas and we will make sure that illegal actions… are punished and are prevented inside and outside university grounds,” Kerameus said.

The asylum was originally introduced to protect protesting students and freedom of expression, but the conservati­ve administra­tion says this has degenerate­d into a cover for lawlessnes­s. The provision regarding the asylum is to be voted on this Thursday.

The initiative was blasted by SYRIZA lawmaker Pavlos Polakis, who said that “ideas are not defeated by laws,” while Dimitris Tzanakopou­los referred to a “far-right frenzy of the government.”

The government is also set to clash with SYRIZA over an article in a multi-bill tabled last week that seeks the replacemen­t of the leadership of the country’s Competitio­n Commission, which is an independen­t authority. The article in question, 101, institutes strict rules regarding matters pertaining to conflict of interest.

According to sources, Vassiliki Thanou, the current head of the independen­t authority, is on her way out on the grounds of conflict of interest.

According to a recommenda­tion accompanyi­ng the bill, heads and members of independen­t administra­tive authoritie­s must not hold or have held posts in political offices of the prime minister, or have been members of the government or government bodies.

“SYRIZA cannot control the independen­t Competitio­n Commission,” said Developmen­t Minister Adonis Georgiadis.

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