“Seriousness is judged in crises, not in slogans,” the government spokesman told the opposition party.
“Where they owed us, they are also asking for us,” Pavlos Marinakis said in an interview with the OPEN television station for PASOK, on the attitude of the opposition party in the Tempi case.
The government spokesman noted that PASOK for about three months “participated in a miserable tooling of human pain, a national tragedy with heavy criminal implications, but which is considered by justice and not self -sufficient judges.” Mr Marinakis said that the government has shown seriousness and respect for the families of the victims and maintained an institutional stance, leaving justice to perform its work. On the contrary, as he pointed out, PASOK attempted to prejudice developments.
“The day before the big rally, they heralded a proposal of mistrust based on a finding that did not end up with certainty. On that day, the conclusion of EPANAAM was presented. So he went during the presentation, he took a piece of the finding that he was talking about, not of certainty and demanded further investigation and demanded that the government fall. Proposal of mistrust means elections and the issue for the government to fall, “the government spokesman told Nikos Androulakis.
He stressed that “the official finding of justice by Mr Karonis is the only scientifically documented” and accused PASOK of contradictory stance. “No one can talk about concealments without saying exactly what is concealed,” he said and recalled statements about “lost wagons”. Commenting on Mr Androulakis’ statements about a lack of confidence in justice, he said that “it is not an institutional political leader who declares that.” At the same time, he called on PASOK to follow the institutional road and submit whatever information it has in justice. Mr Marinakis said that PASOK, which in difficult times in the past has shown responsibility, today has a different attitude focusing on the impression and not in essence. “The seriousness is judged in crises, not in slogans,” the government spokesman underlined.