Viet Nam News

Greek gov't faces censure motion

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Greece's conservati­ve government faced a censure motion in parliament yesterday over claims it had sought to manipulate an ongoing investigat­ion into the nation's worst train tragedy.

After a three-day debate, the no-confidence motion will be put to an evening vote that the government majority is expected to win.

The motion lodged by the socialist PASOK party on Tuesday came after a newspaper report claimed that a key sound recording from the night of the accident, extensivel­y played by media at the time, had been misleading­ly edited.

Opposition parties have accused the government of being behind the alleged subterfuge, as part of efforts to reinforce its chosen narrative that human error was to blame for the collision that claimed 57 lives in February 2023.

"Public opinion has reached an irrevocabl­e conclusion -- that you are geared towards a cover-up" of the train tragedy, Nikos Pappas, parliament speaker for the main opposition Syriza party, told the chamber on Wednesday.

"You are summoned to give answers," he said.

Opposition parties say the government handed out the spliced recording to friendly media.

"In every scandal, in every deed that goes unpunished, your political choice is to hide the truth," PASOK leader Nikos Androulaki­s told the government while submitting the censure motion.

The disaster struck when a freight train and a passenger train with 350 staff and passengers, mostly students, collided near a tunnel outside the central city of Larissa shortly before midnight.

A year after the accident, relatives of the victims say that despite government promises of a full investigat­ion, state authoritie­s wasted time and overlooked vital evidence.

Experts appointed by relatives' families say the accident site was cleaned of wreckage and topsoil before investigat­ors could fully examine it.

The body of a young woman travelling on the passenger train still remains unaccounte­d for.

Experts for the families have also claimed that the freight train was carrying undeclared chemicals that caused a huge explosion after the crash, killing people who might otherwise have survived.

A Metron Analysis opinion poll last week found that almost nine in 10 Greeks thought little progress has been made in the investigat­ion.

On Sunday, the To Vima weekly reported that leaked recordings of train staff on the night of the accident, had been edited to suggest human error was exclusivel­y to blame.

In particular, one clip that saw extensive use at the time had the station master giving the go-ahead to an unnamed train driver.

To Vima on Sunday reported that the discussion was with a driver on an earlier train not involved in the accident, but his name was purposely removed to create the impression that it was with the driver on one of the trains that collided.

Who carried out the alleged manipulati­on is unclear, but To Vima suggested that unauthoris­ed persons had improperly acquired access to material that should have been limited to investigat­ors.

Critics point to an address to the nation by Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis just hours after the accident, in which he said that "everything" showed human error was to blame.

The government has reacted with fury, calling opposition parties "grave robbers" aiming to "destabilis­e" the country.

Government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis called the To Vima report "baseless" and a "stain" on the newspaper's history.

Main opposition party Syriza has called on Mitsotakis, who was comfortabl­y re-elected in June, to resign. AFP

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