Jail for Greek neo-nazi Golden Dawn figures after five-year trial
A GREEK court yesterday handed a 13-year prison sentence to the leader of neo-nazi group Golden Dawn for running a criminal organisation.
As well as Nikos Michaloliakos, the party’s founder – who received an additional one year for illegal possession of a weapon – the court also sentenced five former members of his inner circle to prison terms.
They included independent European Parliament member Ioannis Lagos, deputy party leader Christos Pappas and former party spokesman Ilias Kassidiaris, who recently formed a new nationalist party.
Greek judicial authorities must send a request to the European parliament for Lagos’s immunity to be lifted. Lagos has threatened to appeal to the European Court of Human Rights to overturn his conviction.
Other former Golden Dawn politicians, including Michaloliakos’s wife Eleni Zaroulia, received lighter sentences of between five and 10 years.
None of Golden Dawn’s main members attended the sentencing.
The court also gave a life sentence to Yiorgos Roupakias, the Golden Dawn member who murdered anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas in 2013, the act that triggered the investigation into the group. Mr Fyssas’s father said he was disappointed by the sentences. “They are too light. I am not satisfied. I had hoped they would get 20 years,” he said.
The three judges will now determine whether any of the sentences can be suspended pending any appeal. Those denied this right will likely be detained later this week.
The Golden Dawn trial, which began in 2015, has been described as one of the most important in Greece’s political history. More than 50 were convicted of crimes ranging from running a criminal organisation, murder and assault, to illegal weapons possession.
During the trial, the court heard that Michaloliakos – a Holocaust denier and former protégé of Greek dictator Georgios Papadopoulos – ran his party under a military-style hierarchy modelled on Hitler’s Nazis, with himself as leader for over three decades. A search of party members’ homes in 2013 uncovered weapons and Nazi memorabilia.
Tapping into anti-austerity and antimigrant anger, Golden Dawn for a time was the third most popular party in the country. It held seats in parliament from 2012 onwards, with its politicians shocking the chamber with provocative and aggressive behaviour. It failed to win a single seat in last year’s election.