Houston Chronicle

Letter bomb injures former Greek prime minister, 2 others

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ATHENS, Greece — Former Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos was injured after a letter bomb exploded inside his car in central Athens on Thursday in an attack that also left two Bank of Greece employees wounded.

Authoritie­s said all three were conscious and hospitaliz­ed in stable condition.

“I unequivoca­lly condemn the attack against Lucas Papademos,” Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who was attending the NATO summit in Brussels, tweeted from his official account. “I wish a speedy recovery to him and the people who accompanie­d him.”

Police were on alert to determine whether any other parcel bombs might have been sent out, and were checking postal and courier services.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack, but Greek politician­s have been targeted in the past by militant far-left and anarchist groups.

A statement from the Greek Health Ministry said Papademos, 69, was being treated for wounds in his right thigh and upper body. He served as prime minister for six months in 2011-2012 and is also a former deputy governor of the European Central Bank.

“We are saddened by the attack against our former colleague, Lucas Papademos, a brave public servant of Greece and Europe,” European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said in a statement.

A police official said the explosion occurred when Papademos opened an envelope inside the car. Anti-terrorism police were at the hospital where Papademos was being treated in order to interview him on the details of the envelope.

A second police official said one of the other two wounded in the blast told anti-terrorism police that he had handed Papademos the mail earlier, and that before doing so he had put it through an X-ray machine and nothing suspicious showed up.

The government described the blast as a terrorist attack.

Earlier this year, a group called Conspiracy Cells of Fire, claimed responsibi­lity for sending parcel bombs to the German Finance Ministry and the Paris office of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, where a small explosion injured one person.

The group had also claimed responsibi­lity for a spate of parcel bombings in 2010 targeting several embassies in Athens and the offices of European leaders abroad.

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