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Saturday April 27, 2024

Greek PM faces no-confidence vote over 2023 train crash

Leftist opposition parties submitted a censure motion against the conservative government this week

By REUTERS
March 29, 2024
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis speaks during a joint news conference with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at Maximos Mansion in Athens, Greece. — AFP/File
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis speaks during a joint news conference with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at Maximos Mansion in Athens, Greece. — AFP/File

ATHENS: The government of Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis faces a no-confidence vote on Thursday over the handling of a train crash last year that killed 57 people, after media reports emerged this week alleging manipulation of evidence.

Leftist opposition parties submitted a censure motion against the conservative government this week accusing it of “trying to hide the truth” after a freight train collided head-on with a passenger train in central Greece, the worst accident in the country’s history.

The government denies wrongdoing and is expected to survive the vote given its party’s majority. But the motion highlights how many are still angered by a disaster that revealed how decades of neglect and mismanagement had jeopardised railway safety. Experts say little has changed to improve standards since.

“Like every Greek citizen, we want to know the truth,” Nikos Androulakis, the head of the centre-left PASOK party, told parliament on Wednesday.

A judicial investigation is underway and is expected to be completed in the coming months. Authorities have charged dozens of people over the crash, including a station master who is in custody pending trial.

To Vima newspaper reported on Saturday that a recording of a dialogue between the station master and the train driver, leaked to media hours after the crash, had been allegedly edited to put the blame on human error rather than systemic problems in the rail network.

Reuters was unable to verify the allegations. Investigators hired by victims’ relatives have also alleged that quickly removing burnt carriages from the crash site and laying down gravel may have destroyed evidence. Greece did not have a functional national investigating body of such incidents at the time of the crash.