A bomb exploded outside Athens’ main prison on Thursday, slightly injuring two people and damaging dozens of shops and homes up to four blocks away, police said.
A police official said the bomb was placed inside a garbage container close to the wall of Korydallos prison, where the convicted members of the deadly Nov. 17 urban guerrilla group are serving sentences.
A man and a woman were slightly injured by broken glass. The blast was heard kilometers away, a witness said.
PHOTO: REUTERS
“It was a very powerful bomb, probably the biggest we have had in years, but we had evacuated the area,” the police official said.
An unidentified caller had warned a Greek TV station and a newspaper that a bomb would blow up outside the prison in minutes. Police rushed to evacuate the area and the device went off at about 19:15GMT.
“We have counted 55 shops and homes damaged so far in a radius of several blocks,” the police official said.
Most buildings had their windows blown out.
Police said the attack could be an act of sympathy with six suspected members of the country’s most militant guerrilla group, Revolutionary Struggle. Several suspected members of the leftist group were captured and charged last month.
Bomb attacks by militant groups are frequent in Greece and usually target police, public buildings or businesses.
In March, a 15-year-old immigrant boy was killed and his mother and sister wounded after a bomb exploded outside a building in central Athens, in the first deadly attack in years.
Urban violence has increased after the police shooting of a teenager in December 2008, which prompted weeks of riots.
Social unrest is also picking up after Greece took belt-tightening measures, include wage cuts and tax hikes in recent months, aimed at pulling the country out of a debt crisis.
Tens of thousands of people took to the streets to protest austerity measures last week and more protests are planned by labor unions. During the march, three people, one of them a pregnant woman, were killed when hooded youths threw gasoline bombs at a bank in central Athens.
The Philippines yesterday said its coast guard would acquire 40 fast patrol craft from France, with plans to deploy some of them in disputed areas of the South China Sea. The deal is the “largest so far single purchase” in Manila’s ongoing effort to modernize its coast guard, with deliveries set to start in four years, Philippine Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Ronnie Gil Gavan told a news conference. He declined to provide specifications for the vessels, which Manila said would cost 25.8 billion pesos (US$440 million), to be funded by development aid from the French government. He said some of the vessels would
CARGO PLANE VECTOR: Officials said they believe that attacks involving incendiary devices on planes was the work of Russia’s military intelligence agency the GRU Western security officials suspect Russian intelligence was behind a plot to put incendiary devices in packages on cargo planes headed to North America, including one that caught fire at a courier hub in Germany and another that ignited in a warehouse in England. Poland last month said that it had arrested four people suspected to be linked to a foreign intelligence operation that carried out sabotage and was searching for two others. Lithuania’s prosecutor general Nida Grunskiene on Tuesday said that there were an unspecified number of people detained in several countries, offering no elaboration. The events come as Western officials say
A plane bringing Israeli soccer supporters home from Amsterdam landed at Israel’s Ben Gurion airport on Friday after a night of violence that Israeli and Dutch officials condemned as “anti-Semitic.” Dutch police said 62 arrests were made in connection with the violence, which erupted after a UEFA Europa League soccer tie between Amsterdam club Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv. Israeli flag carrier El Al said it was sending six planes to the Netherlands to bring the fans home, after the first flight carrying evacuees landed on Friday afternoon, the Israeli Airports Authority said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also ordered
Former US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi said if US President Joe Biden had ended his re-election bid sooner, the Democratic Party could have held a competitive nominating process to choose his replacement. “Had the president gotten out sooner, there may have been other candidates in the race,” Pelosi said in an interview on Thursday published by the New York Times the next day. “The anticipation was that, if the president were to step aside, that there would be an open primary,” she said. Pelosi said she thought the Democratic candidate, US Vice President Kamala Harris, “would have done