http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/video/2013/sep/27/golden-dawn-anti-fascist-knifed-video-interview
A young Greek woman describes how she was set upon by two supporters of Greece's far-right movement Golden Dawn. The woman suffered cuts to her face and arms in the attack, which happened the day after the anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas was stabbed to death. She says she has not reported the attack to the police, because she does not have confidence that they will take action. The interviewee's voice has been disguised
A young Greek woman describes how she was set upon by two supporters of Greece's far-right movement Golden Dawn. The woman suffered cuts to her face and arms in the attack, which happened the day after the anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas was stabbed to death. She says she has not reported the attack to the police, because she does not have confidence that they will take action. The interviewee's voice has been disguised
ATHENS -- Greek police Saturday arrested the leader of the
country’s far-right Golden Dawn party as part of a major crackdown on
the group triggered by the fatal stabbing last week of a young
anti-fascist rapper, allegedly by a Golden Dawn sympathizer.
Party leader Nikos Michaloliakos was arrested at his home in an
early-morning police operation expected to continue throughout the day,
with arrest warrants out on 35 other party members and elected
representatives in the Greek parliament, police said. Michaloliakos’
arrest, the first of a political leader since democracy was restored
here after the country's brutal 1967-1974 military dictatorship, was on
suspicion of heading a “criminal organization.” Ilias Kassidiaris, the
party’s spokesman who fled arrest last year after
punching a communist member of parliament during a televised debate, was
also arrested in the unprecedented roundup. "None of them showed any
resistance,” said Loukas Krikos, a senior police official involved in
the operation. “They are being held in police
headquarters and will be charged by a prosecutor within the day." Since
the party’s election to parliament last year -- it won a stunning 7% of
the vote and 18 seats in the nation’s 300-member legislature -- pundits
and politicians have been divided over its
presence on the country’s political landscape. Leftist parties long
accused the conservative-led government of displaying "excessive
tolerance" of the group and its thuggish tactics, including attacks on
immigrants, homosexuals and the disabled.
But since the
fatal Sept. 18 stabbing of Pavlos Fyssas, the 34-year-old hip-hop artist
known by the stage name Killah P., authorities have launched an all-out
offensive against Golden Dawn, moving to outlaw it. A 45-year-old
part-time fish trader linked to the group has
been arrested and charged in connection with the fatal stabbing. Both
Michaloliakos and Kassidiaris face life sentences if brought to trial,
and emergency legislation drafted by the justice minister, due to be
debated in parliament Monday, could see the party
stripped of state campaign funding, officials said. Golden Dawn has
vowed to use "all legal means at its disposal" to defend itself from
criminal prosecution, including the resignation of all its 18 deputies
in parliament, a move that could spark early elections.
L.A. Times
L.A. Times
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