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World / Europe

Top Greek court orders probe into wiretap scandal report

Published: 06 Nov 2022 - 07:20 pm | Last Updated: 06 Nov 2022 - 07:22 pm
File photo: Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. (Reuters)

File photo: Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. (Reuters)

AFP

Athens: Greece's supreme court has ordered a probe into a bombshell report that more than 30 politicians, journalists and businessmen were targeted by state surveillance, a justice source said on Sunday.

The editor of leftist weekly Documento which broke the story, Kostas Vaxevanis, has said he will testify on Monday.

The weekly on Saturday said the list of targets included former premier Antonis Samaras, current members of the cabinet and shipping magnate Vangelis Marinakis, owner of Olympiakos and Nottingham Forest football clubs.

Spyware known as Predator was used illegally in collaboration with technology employed by Greece's state intelligence agency EYP, the newspaper added.

Influential members of the conservative New Democracy party, potential rivals in any future leadership challenge to Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, were among those targeted, the newspaper said.

The government has downplayed the report as lacking evidence, but nonetheless called on judicial authorities to investigate.

Documento, which has close links to the main opposition Syriza party, sourced its information to "two people with key roles in the surveillance".

On Friday, a European Parliament committee investigating wiretaps in Greece and other EU states called for a deeper investigation of the case.

A Greek parliamentary committee set up to investigate the scandal folded after a month, and critics said it failed to summon key witnesses.

The affair exploded in July when Nikos Androulakis -- an MEP and leader of Greece's Socialist party -- filed a complaint against alleged attempts to tap his mobile phone using Predator spyware.

Within days, it emerged that Androulakis was under surveillance separately by Greek intelligence before he became leader of Pasok, the country's third largest party.

Two Greek journalists and another senior opposition politician also claim to have been under surveillance.

The scandal forced the resignations in August of the Greek intelligence service chief as well as a close aide and nephew to the prime minister.

The Greek government has flatly denied using illegal surveillance software. It has admitted that state intelligence monitored Androulakis, without disclosing the reason.

Mitsotakis has promised to ban the use of illegal wiretaps by law. But critics note that one of his first acts when he became prime minister in 2019 was to attach the national intelligence service to his personal office.