Sun Sep 29,
2013 5:16am IST
* Biggest
crackdown on elected party since fall of junta
* Party
members charged with participating in criminal group
*
"Nothing can scare us!" party spokesman says
*
Government rules out snap elections
By Renee
Maltezou and George Georgiopoulos
ATHENS,
Sept 28 (Reuters) - Greek police arrested the leader and more than a dozen
senior members of the far-right Golden Dawn party early on Saturday after the killing
of an anti-fascist rapper by a party supporter triggered outrage and protests
across the country.
The
arrests, which are the most significant crackdown on a political party in Greece since
the fall of a military dictatorship in 1974, are the biggest setback to Golden
Dawn since it entered parliament on an anti-immigrant agenda last year.
"Nothing
can scare us!" shouted a handcuffed Ilias Kasidiaris, spokesman of the
party, as he was transferred to the prosecutors' office flanked by hooded
anti-terrorism police officers carrying machineguns.
Kasidiaris
and the party's leader, Nikolaos Mihaloliakos, three other lawmakers and 13
other members of the party were arrested on Saturday on charges of founding and
participating in a criminal organisation.
Police also
confiscated two guns and a hunting rifle from Mihaloliakos' home, saying he did
not have a licence for them.
Ranked as Greece 's third
most popular party, Golden Dawn is under investigation for the murder of rapper
Pavlos Fissas, who bled to death after being stabbed twice by a party
sympathiser last week.
The party
has denied any links to the killing of Fissas.
The
anti-terrorism force, which is handling the case, was looking for one more
senior party official and lawmaker, police spokesman Christos Parthenis said.
Two police officials were also arrested on Saturday, he added.
Late in the
evening, the detainees were taken under high security to the prosecutors'
office and charged officially on evidence linking the party with a string of
attacks, including the stabbing of the rapper on Sept. 17 and the killing of an
immigrant earlier this year, court officials told Reuters.
Public
Order Minister Nikos Dendias hailed the arrests as "a historic day for Greece and Europe ."
"I
want to assure Greek citizens that the investigation will not end here,"
Dendias said. "There is no room for criminal organisations in Greece ."
Mihaloliakos
has warned that Golden Dawn could pull its 18 lawmakers from parliament if the
crackdown does not stop.
If
potential by-elections were won by the opposition, as some polls indicate, Greece 's
fragile two-party coalition would become politically untenable, Mihaloliakos
has argued. But a government official said Greece might be able to avoid such
by-elections depending on how the constitution is interpreted.
The party
called on its website for protests in solidarity with its jailed leader and
members.
Several
hundred of its supporters gathered outside police headquarters waving Greek
flags and chanting: "Long live the leader!" and "Blood, Honour,
Golden Dawn". About 200 protesters unfurled a banner reading: "Golden
Dawn" outside the party's headquarters in Athens .
"Golden
Dawn is here. It will not back down. You cannot jail ideas," Golden Dawn
MP Artemis Mattheopoulos, who is not among those detained, told reporters.
'TACTIC TO
IMPRESS?'
Prime
Minister Antonis Samaras' government has so far resisted calls to ban the
party, fearing it could make it even more popular at a time of growing anger at
repeated rounds of austerity measures. It has instead tried to undermine the
party by ordering probes that could deprive it of state funding.
Samaras
ruled out snap elections after the arrests. The government has also played down
talk of political instability and promised all Golden Dawn members would
receive a fair trial.
The arrests
surprised Greeks wary of political theatre in a country where little has been
done over the past year to rein in a party that is frequently accused of
attacking migrants, a charge it denies.
"It's
good that they arrested them, but I'm afraid that we will start killing each
other now," said Dimitra Vassilopoulou, a 58-year old housewife.
"Does
the government actually mean it or is it just a tactic to impress us? Why
didn't they do anything when the immigrants were killed? How come they just
discovered that Golden Dawn is a criminal organisation?"
Golden Dawn
controls 18 of parliament's 300 seats and had so far appeared immune to
accusations of violence and intimidation, scoring 14 percent in opinion polls
before the stabbing. Two polls this week showed support had fallen to as low as
6.7 to 6.8 percent.
Greek
lawmakers do not lose their political rights or seats unless there is a final
court ruling against them. But the government has proposed a law that could
block state funding for Golden Dawn if police find links to Fissas' murder.
The party,
whose emblem resembles a swastika, rose from obscurity to enter parliament last
year after promising to mine Greece 's
borders to prevent illegal immigrants from entering. Its members have been seen
giving Nazi-style salutes and its leader has denied the Holocaust. The party
rejects the neo-Nazi label.
Human
rights groups have accused the party of being linked to attacks on immigrants,
but this is the first time it is being investigated for evidence linking it to
an attack.
It is not
the first time its leader is being prosecuted. In 1979, Mihaloliakos was
convicted of possessing explosives.
Mihaloliakos'
daughter rushed to kiss her father as he entered the court, on his way to the
prosecutors' office.
"I'm
proud of my father, like any child would be if its father faced such political
charges," Ourania Mihaloliakou told reporters. "We are stronger than
ever."
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