THE Alexis Tsipras responded with spikes to today’s reports of Kyriakos Mitsotakis, at the “Greece Talks” conference, organized by Travel.gr and Proto Themaabout his upcoming book titled Ithaca, which the Prime Minister called an “interesting novel” but said he was not going to read it.
The former prime minister noted that he understands the avoidance of Mr. Mitsotakis to deal with “study of yesterday’s tragedy“, to which – as he argued – his faction led the country, but also with the “viciousness and impasses of today’s government”. In fact, he noted that prime minister he is afraid of his book.
“He prefers to devote his time to Mrs. Kovesi’s case files, the “Frappe” dialogues, the transcripts of the wiretapping, the developments about the Tempe crime and the support of kleptocracy”, said Alexis Tsipras.
He also accused him of choosing “the cover-up and the deconstructing the truth from the confrontation with her”, claiming that he and his associates are afraid of the dynamics of “Ithaca”.
“Our country deserves a better future, a future of honesty and justice, free from the Laistrygones and Cyclops of Mr. Mitsotakis,” concludes the president of SYRIZA-PS.
The post of Alexis Tsipras in detail
“Mr. Mitsotakis today called my unpublished book entitled Ithaca an ‘interesting novel’ and stated that he is not going to read it, but leaves its deconstruction to others.
I understand that he prefers to study the tragedy of yesterday, into which his faction plunged the country, and the discussion of the wickedness and impasses of today’s administration, to devote his time to the case files of Mrs. Kovesi, the dialogues of “Frape”, the transcripts of the wiretapping, the developments about the crime of Tempe and the support of kleptocracy.
And to choose, as he has done throughout his journey, the concealment and deconstruction of the truth, rather than the confrontation with it.
But our country deserves a better future, a future of honesty and justice, free from the Laistrygones and Cyclops of Mr. Mitsotakis.
And precisely this, the contribution of Ithaca to such a future, he and his accomplices fear.”