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- WORLD, Page 38GREECEOut of Office, Into the Dock?
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- Papandreou is accused in the Koskotas scandal
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- In classical Greece the elected magistrates of Athens,
- called Archons, held secret ballots to banish leaders when they
- were accused of serious transgressions. Last week a similar
- process began in the Greek parliament after two government
- commissions recommended that criminal charges be brought against
- former Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou. The panels accused
- Papandreou of complicity in the Bank of Crete scandal and of
- ordering illegal wiretaps. Parliament is expected to refer the
- charges to a special criminal court.
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- The Bank of Crete scandal involves allegations by the
- bank's owner, George Koskotas, that he systematically looted
- the Athens-based institution of some $210 million, and then
- distributed much of the money to high-ranking members of the
- Socialist Party (PASOK), including the Prime Minister. The
- commission said it found enough corroboration of Koskotas'
- charges, which he first made publicly in exclusive interviews
- with TIME last March, to recommend prosecution of Papandreou for
- bribe taking and receiving stolen money.
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- Vyron Polydoras, the secretary of the commission
- investigating the Koskotas charges, told TIME that while the
- case is not open and shut, "events point to Papandreou." The
- PASOK members on the commission had a different assessment. They
- issued a minority report saying the evidence was insufficient
- and "fabricated." Papandreou denounced the charges as a
- "settling of personal and political accounts" by the
- conservative-leftist coalition government that took office in
- July.
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- Papandreou was also accused by a second commission of
- running an extensive wiretapping operation out of the
- headquarters of the Greek secret service. According to the
- report, he routinely snooped on political opponents,
- journalists, even members of his own Cabinet.
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