Malta Independent

Explosion damages court complex; no injuries

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A powerful explosion damaged a court complex in central Athens early yesterday, hours after Parliament voted to crackdown on anti-bailout protesters who gather regularly at the building. Police said the blast occurred before dawn, and that one of the attackers fired a shot at a police guard while escaping. No one was injured in the attack that followed warning telephone calls to the offices of a daily newspaper and news website. Police later found the van used by the attackers after it had been set on fire across town. No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. It occurred hours after the parliament approved measures to impose penalties against demonstrat­ors who gather regularly at the court to try and disrupt weekly auctions of foreclosed homes. The auctions have put pressure on Greece's left-wing government, which has abandoned tougher protection measures for distressed mortgage holders as part of negotiatio­ns with bailout lenders. After years of recession and financial crisis, roughly half of loans in Greece are considered non-performing — the highest level in the European Union. Yesterday’s blast caused extensive damage to the marble-and-glass facade of the Athens Appeals Court, a large building that is next to the country's Supreme Court and near the Greek Police's headquarte­rs. "This criminal act is heinous and to be condemned because the perpetrato­rs not only caused material damage, but there was a direct threat on the life of a (policed) guard," Justice Minister Stavros Kontonis said. Early yesterday, police cordoned off streets around the court in a heavily guarded area of the city, as officers in white coveralls gathered evidence.

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