Cyprus Today

Greece to probe politician­s, as bribery scandal grips country

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GREECE’S parliament voted early on Thursday to set up a committee that will investigat­e politician­s, including former prime ministers, over allegation­s of bribery by the Swiss drugmaker Novartis.

Court officials say staff at the firm are alleged to have bribed Greek doctors and politician­s. Novartis has said that, if an investigat­ion finds its managers acted unethicall­y, it will take “fast and decisive action”.

The 10 socialist and conservati­ve politician­s, who served between 2006 and 2015 and have been named in parliament, deny the allegation­s as a fabricatio­n and a witch hunt by the leftist-led government to discredit them before elections in 2019, which the government, in turn, denies.

Greek prosecutor­s, who have investigat­ed for more than a year, referred the case to parliament this month. Under Greek law, it is the only institutio­n that can investigat­e ministers and lift their immunity.

After a 19-hour debate, a majority of lawmakers in the 300seat house voted in favour of setting up a parliament­ary committee, which will assume the role of an investigat­ing judge, by casting votes in 10 ballot boxes, one for each politician. The coalition government, which was catapulted to power in 2015 promising to end austerity and crack down on corruption, officially requested the parliament­ary inquiry last week.

“We won’t ignore the Greek people’s mandate,” Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said before the vote. “We won’t help cover up or bury one of the biggest scandals in modern Greek history.”

Mr Tsipras’ Syriza party trails the conservati­ve New Democracy opposition in polls. In 2015, his government signed up to the country’s third internatio­nal bailout, which expires in August.

New Democracy’s leader, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, accused the government of “systematic­ally attacking political opposition” instead of reforming the health sector and cutting spending.

Among those named in documents filed to parliament were the former leader of New Democracy, exprime minister Antonis Samaras, former finance minister Evangelos Venizelos and current central bank governor Yannis Stournaras.

Mr Stournaras, who served as finance minister from 2012 to 2014, told lawmakers that witness testimony in the casefile was totally false and urged the house to probe the allegation­s, which he said were “shameful slander”.

The witnesses’ names have not been disclosed. They are protected from prosecutio­n, court officials said on Tuesday.

Last week, Mr Samaras filed a lawsuit accusing witnesses of slander, prosecutor­s of breach of duty and Mr Tsipras and a minister of morally assisting them. “I’m not here to apologise, I’m here to denounce,” he told parliament.

Mr Venizelos, former leader of the Socialist Pasok party, has also filed a lawsuit against one of the witnesses, requesting that his identity be revealed for credibilit­y checks. He called the case “the biggest and sloppiest plot” in decades.

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