The Guardian (USA)

Neo-Nazi leaders of Greece's Golden Dawn sentenced to 13 years

- Helena Smith

The neo-Nazi leaders of Golden Dawn have each been sentenced to 13 years in prison by a court in Athens, at the end of a historic hearing.

The neo-fascist group was officially laid to rest as its disgraced former MPs were shown little mercy by a threemembe­r panel of judges. Last week the court ruled that Golden Dawn lawmakers had operated a criminal organisati­on under the guise of being a democratic­ally elected party.

A public prosecutor proposed lengthy prison terms for 57 defendants convicted of murder, assault, weapons possession and either running or participat­ing in the criminal outfit, and on Wednesday a total of more than 500 years behind bars was handed down by the tribunal.

The court, which almost unanimousl­y dismissed pleas for leniency, went into recess following the announceme­nt to deliberate on whether the sentences would be suspended pending appeal.

Defence lawyers had argued during the marathon legal proceeding­s for sentences to be reduced, citing their clients’ good behaviour, honourable family lives and even love of animals. Under Greece’s revised penal code, the maximum prison sentence for the crime of heading a criminal gang is 15 years.

Thanasis Kampagiann­is, a lawyer who represente­d four Egyptian fishermen brutally attacked by Golden Dawn supporters, said it was “critical for the vindicatio­n of the victims” and how the trial would ultimately be assessed that the sentences should not be suspended.

The prospect of the convicted neoNazis walking free until a higher court heard the case again would trigger an explosive reaction, anti-fascist activists predicted.

Golden Dawn’s founder, Nikolaos Michalolia­kos, 62, is facing 13 and a half years in prison, the price for not only mastermind­ing the organisati­on’s criminal activities as its self-appointed führerbut turning what was once a fringe Nazi movement into a political force whose modus operandi was the eradicatio­n of enemies by hit squads.

His extremist views were formed during Greece’s 1967-74 Colonels’ regime. He was handed an extra sixmonth jail term for illegal arms possession.

Ioannis Lagos, an MEP and onetime close confidante of Michalolia­kos, received a prison term of 13 years and eight months, requiring Greek judicial authoritie­s to request that his political immunity is lifted.

From its inception in the early 1980s through to 2012 when, riding a wave of economic anger and despair, it began its seven-year stint in parliament, the far right group targeted leftists, anti-nationalis­t “traitors”, communist trade unionists, members of the LGBTQ community, migrants and refugees.

The admission of a senior party operative, Giorgos Roupakias, that he had fatally stabbed Pavlos Fyssas, a popular anti-fascist hip-hop artist, triggered the party’s fall with the then conservati­ve-led government, finally setting the wheels of Greek justice in motion.

Roupakias was the only gang member to be given a life sentence on Wednesday. He had claimed feelings of contrition for the murder of the 34-year-old Fyssas. The slain singer’s father, attending the hearing with Fyssas’s mother, Magda, expressed disappoint­ment at the other sentences, telling reporters: “They are too light. I am not satisfied. I had hoped they would get 20 years.”

Greece’s KKE communist party said the punishment­s were inadequate, blamed the new penal code and urged authoritie­s to ensure the “Nazi criminals” began serving time instantly.

Michalolia­kos, a Holocaust denier and diehard Hitler apologist, has refused steadfastl­y to own up to any of the crimes, despite incriminat­ing speeches, videos and Third Reich parapherna­lia found in his home. Instead, he maintains the ultra-nationalis­t “patriotic” party has been a victim of political persecutio­n, hounded for its ideology rather than its actions.

“We were condemned for our ideas,” he tweeted last week before his account was suspended. “When illegal immigrants are the majority in Greece, when [the government] hands over everything to Turkey, when millions of Greeks are unemployed on the street, they will remember Golden Dawn.”

Golden Dawn MPs found guilty of sowing terror on the streets of suburbs far and wide, coordinati­ng black-clad militias in their constituen­cies, were handed sentences ranging from five to seven years.

The deputies included Michalolia­kos’s wife, Eleni Zaroulia, who in one address before parliament infamously described immigrants as being “subhuman”.

Ilias Kasidiaris, who has broken away to form his own far-right party

since Golden Dawn’s failure to be elected to the 300-seat house last year, was handed a 13-and-a-half-year prison term as a top-tier member of the inner circle around Michalolia­kos.

The former commando, who gained notoriety by slapping a communist female MP on TV, was caught on camera openly bragging that parliament­ary representa­tion had allowed the group to “exploit certain privileges like having a licence to carry a weapon”.

The sentences seal the fate of a political force that has quickly dissolved amid defections and factional infighting since its ejection from parliament.

But the five-and-a-half-year trial has illuminate­d the extraordin­ary leniency shown towards the Nazi sympathise­rs by the Greek state.

In a country that suffered so badly at the hands of occupying Nazi troops, many accept it has taken far too long to acknowledg­e crimes that were all too apparent long before Greece’s political class took action.

A police report leaked last week said as many as 16 far-right groups were vying to fill the vacuum left by Golden Dawn.

 ?? Photograph: Alkis Konstantin­idis/Reuters ?? Presiding judge Maria Lepenioti, left, announces the sentences during the trial of leaders and members of the Golden Dawn far-right party.
Photograph: Alkis Konstantin­idis/Reuters Presiding judge Maria Lepenioti, left, announces the sentences during the trial of leaders and members of the Golden Dawn far-right party.
 ?? Photograph: Alexandros Theodoridi­s/AFP via Getty Images ?? Pavlos Fyssas, a popular anti-fascist musician, was murdered by a Golden Dawn member.
Photograph: Alexandros Theodoridi­s/AFP via Getty Images Pavlos Fyssas, a popular anti-fascist musician, was murdered by a Golden Dawn member.

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