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  • Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

Greek PM Says He Didn't Know About Wiretap Of Oppositionist

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said Monday, August 8, 2022, that he did not know that the country’s intelligence service had been bugging an opposition politician’s mobile phone for three months, but said he would have stopped the operation had he been aware of it.


Photo Insert: Mitsotakis said the mobile phones of Nikos Androulakis, who had been running for the leadership of the socialist PASOK opposition party at the time, had been placed under “legal surveillance” from Sept. 2021 for three months.



Reporting for the Associated Press (AP), Elena Becatoris and Derek Gatopoulus said Mitsotakis, who faces elections next year, made the remarks in a televised address to the nation three days after a wiretapping scandal led to the resignations of the head of the National Intelligence Service, Panagiotis Kontoleon, and the general secretary of the prime minister’s office, Grigoris Dimitriadis.



“What happened might have been in accordance with the letter of the law, but it was wrong,” Mitsotakis said. “I didn’t know about it and obviously, I would never have allowed it.”


The National Intelligence Service, known by its acronym EYP, answers directly to the prime minister’s office, a change Mitsotakis brought about himself after winning 2019 elections.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Mitsotakis said the mobile phones of Nikos Androulakis, who had been running for the leadership of the socialist PASOK opposition party at the time, had been placed under “legal surveillance” from Sept. 2021 for three months.


The wiretaps had been halted “automatically” a few days after Androulakis won the party leadership race, he said but did not elaborate on why the opposition politician was targeted.


Government & politics: Politicians, government officials and delegates standing in front of their country flags in a political event in the financial district.

“Even though everything happened legally, the National Intelligence Service underestimated the political dimension of the particular action,” Mitsotakis said. “It was formally adequate, but politically not acceptable. It should not have happened, causing rifts in citizens’ trust of the national security services.”


The prime minister said that since the handling of the issue was inappropriate, the head of EYP “was removed immediately” and his own office’s general secretary “assumed the objective political responsibility” by resigning.





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