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    Categories: 2022

Armenian Embassy in Greece categorically refutes its involvement in spying on Greek oppositionist

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 8 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. The Armenian Embassy in Greece categorically refutes the information published in the Greek media that spyware installed on the phone of one of the leading  opposition parties in the country, leader of the socialists Nikos  Androulakis, was including at the request of the Armenian Special  Service.

"The information spread in the media is a shameless lie. Armenia has  never asked any government to tap anyone's phones,"  Armenian  Ambassador to Greece Tigran Mkrtchyan said, referring to the  publications that Armenia is involved in wiretapping of the telephone  conversations of chairman of the Greek PASOK party, Nikos  Androulakis.

"The Prime Minister of Greece also touched on this topic today. The  Republic of Armenia could not take such a step either from a legal or  moral point of view. That is, the claim itself is illiteracy. It is  clear that some forces are very concerned about the level of  Armenian-Greek relations and their further deepening," Mkrtchyan  wrote on his Facebook page.

Earlier, the Greek media disseminated information that the Greek  National Intelligence Service (EYP) tapped the phone of MEP Nikos  Androulakis for three months, until he was elected leader of the  Movement for Change party – PASOK (old name – KINAL). According to  the Ta Nea daily newspaper, the surveillance was carried out at the  request of two foreign intelligence agencies: Armenia and Ukraine,  using the Predator software.  Then, Androulakis filed a complaint  with the Supreme Court in connection with an attempt to spy on his  phone in 2021 using the Predator software. On August 5, 2022, EYP  chief Panagiotis Kontoleon resigned.  

"I would never have thought that the Greek government would be spying  against me. It is our democratic duty to protect the rights and  freedoms of the citizens of Greece. Today is the moment of truth for  those people who, driven by arrogance and a sense of impunity, seem  incapable of doing so," said the leader of the Greek opposition.  

A few hours after Androulakis's statement, the country's government  confirmed that spyware had indeed been installed on the socialist  leader's phone by the country's security services, without citing  Armenian or Ukrainian traces of the scandal.  Today, Greek Prime  Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, referring to this topic during his  televised address, said that he did not intend to resign because of  the scandal with wiretapping of the opposition politician Nikos  Androulakis. Mitsotakis said that, nevertheless, he intends to  propose a number of changes in the work of the special services.

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