The lawyer of one of the protesters said: 'this is the new face of the police, with the collaboration of the justice system'.
One neo-Nazi protester got arrested by the police and put in a police van: a neo-Nazi MP went inside the police van, removed the demonstrator and the police simply looked on and did nothing. A journalist was threatened and beaten by the neo-Nazis and again while the police looked on and did nothing. 'They're beating me, are you going to do nothing?' shouted the journalist. This is what he posted on twitter: 'I move away so I can look on from a distance. One fascist MP follows me, punches me in the face twice and knocks me to the ground. The police are two steps away but they turn their back'.
I called Mr Samaras a hypocrite in my post on 8 October for claiming that the rise of the neo-Nazi party was a destabilising factor and that 'Greek democracy is perhaps facing its biggest challenge', likening the situation to the Weimar Republic. I posed a number of questions related to the measures his government has taken that have actually helped and colluded with the neo-Nazis.
Mr Dendias claimed that the Guardian report on torture of anti-fascist protesters in the hands of the police was false. He claimed that this report was something that was pushed through by SY.RIZ.A and that he will sue the Guardian if no proof of torture is found by the doctors. He added that since there are no official lawsuits against the police, and since the detainees have not gone on record with their names and reports, there is no justification for the publication of the piece. He disputes the originality of the pictures of the torture that have been published on the internet. He denies the fact that the protesters have not gone on record about the torture because they are afraid of the neo-Nazis and the police.
When asked about the Hytirio incident, he made no mention of fascist MPs attacking people but tried to justify why police stood by and did nothing to protect people who were being beaten up, by explaining that they did not have orders to arrest people.
It seems that, knowing he is losing the police to the neo-Nazis, Mr Dendias is trying to placate them.
Mr Dendias as Minister of Public Order has made it very clear what he understands by 'order' and who he is going to side with and protect.
My question is this: if the police are the arm of the state, and if the state and the police collude with the neo-Nazis, does this then not mean that the neo-Nazis themselves are an arm of the state?
Related articles:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/oct/09/greek-antifascist-protesters-torture-police
http://www.urbandiaries.gr/2012/10/17/dendias-exposed-on-his-unwillingness-to-reform-the-greek-police/
http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/greeks-fascist-homophobes-have-gay-jesus-on-their-side
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