The Borneo Post

Greek ex-PM Mitsotakis, early austerity champion, dies aged 98

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ATHENS: Former Greek Prime Minister Constantin­e Mitsotakis, an early proponent of austerity cuts that Greece eventually had to adopt during the economic crisis, died yesterday aged 98, his family said.

A patriarch of one of Greece’s most inf luential political families, Mitsotakis quit politics in 2004, aged 85, after serving as the country’s longestser­ving parliament­arian.

“He died at 0100 ( 2200 GMT) surrounded by the people whom he loved and who loved him,” a family statement said. It did not indicate the cause of death.

The conservati­ve politician was prime minister from 1990 to 1993 and served without interrupti­on as an MP from 1946 on the ticket of several different parties, except for a ten-year break during and immediatel­y after Greece’s 1967-1974 military junta.

He was head of the conservati­ve New Democracy party from 1984 to 1993 – which is today run by his son Kyriakos – and had epic battles with Andreas Papandreou, head of the socialist party Pasok.

One of Greece’s few openly pro-US politician­s at the time, Mitsotakis cultivated close ties with the family of former president George HW Bush and frequently hosted them at his home in Crete.

This did not prevent him from also forging close relations with Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic and supporting him during the wars that tore apart Yugoslavia in the 1990s. On the domestic front, Mitsotakis championed a tight budget and privatisat­ions that sparked major union strikes and protests. In later years, he insisted that Greece would have avoided the economic crisis that erupted in 2010 if his policies had been adopted earlier.

“You were always ahead of your time,” New Democracy press chief Makarios Lazaridis said yesterday.

His support for budget cuts earned him the nickname ‘ Dracula’ from his enemies. To his friends, he was often known as ‘ the tall one’ due to his imposing height. His government eventually collapsed over a name dispute with Macedonia that continues to poison relations with the neighbouri­ng country. — AFP

 ??  ?? Constantin­e Mitsotakis
Constantin­e Mitsotakis

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