Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in a speech today asked his parliamentary group to vote for a parliamentary preliminary criminal investigation regarding allegations of politicians receiving kickbacks in the Novartis scandal, and he blasted previous New Democracy and Pasok governments for nurturing a climate of corruption.
“The country was thrown against the rocks due to practices of mismanagement of public funds, and a pervasive political culture of tolerance for corruption, which prevailed for years in the country,” he said, speaking further of moral decline and the degradation of the entire political system.
“There was not a single scandal revealed without cries of political prosecution,” he said, replying to New Democracy’s charges that the PM seeks to annihilate his political opponents through the Novartis scandal, which he said is documented in hefty judicial files.
“Nothing should remain hidden, nothing swept under the rug, but without excesses and without witch hunts, without popular courts.” he said, asserting that the aim of annihilating political opponents is alien to the left-wing.
“As long as some speak of plots and of being set up, they offend the judiciary itself and prosecutors,” the PM said.
23 bn euros lost from drug pricing rackets
Quite a few billions of euros were lost due to the Novartis affair, and drugs overpricing between 2000-2010 led to 23 billion euros in losses, according to preliminary calculations, the PM asserted, without referring to any particular audit. He said that if that money had been saved, the bailout memorandums may have been unnecessary.
Greece will sue Novartis over huge damages
Tsipras said Greece will exhaust all its domestic and international legal tools to sue Novartis for the huge losses to the public coffers from Novartis’ business practices. “We will avail ourselves of every possibility in domestic and international law to take back even the very last euro that they stole from the Greek people,” the PM declared.
Only in the case of crimes committed by sitting ministers is there a brief statute of limitations, the PM said, whereas all other crimes can prosecuted at least for the ensuing 15 years.
New Democracy ‘blackmails’ witnesses, judiciary
Tsipras unleashed a frontal attack on main opposition leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis and his party, charging that, “They have launched an operation of scaring, threatening, and blackmailing witnesses, the competent prosecutors, and the Greek justice system.”
“Publicly, openly, unabashedly they are supplanting political practice with para-state practices, talk of hoods and scare operations. What connection does today’s New Democracy with its civil war-type rhetoric, its undermining lack of measure, and its divisive policy line, with the [traditional] conservative party of order, lawfulness, and the democratic strictness of the popular right envisioned by its founder [the late Constantine Karamanlis],” the PM declared, once again driving a wedge between New Democracy’s traditional and more right-wing factions.
“Let him [Mitsotakis] name names to show who set up the plot that he invokes,” the PM said.