Greek
politics
Dec 20th
2013, 16:15 by K.H. | ATHENS
The
Economist
ARE old
nepotistic habits finally dying in Greece ? The arrest on December 17th
of Michalis Liapis, an ex-transport minister and first cousin of a former
conservative premier, for driving his SUV with fake number-plates and no
insurance, suggests that prominent politicians can no longer count on lenient
treatment by the police.
Members of
parliament enjoy immunity from prosecution unless their peers vote to remove
it, a privilege informally extended to scores of ex-cabinet ministers when they
leave politics. Like many Greeks cutting costs because of the crisis, Mr Liapis
turned in his number-plates this year to avoid paying road tax after it was
sharply increased for owners of luxury vehicles. Stopped by police for running
a red light in the seaside town of Loutsa near Athens , he explained he
was taking the car for a spin to stop the battery from running down. "I am
a pensioner and I too have been affected by the crisis,” he claimed.