Bomb rocks Greek courthouse amid foreclosures row
A bomb exploded early yesterday outside one of Greece's main courthouses, causing material damage but no injuries, with police suspecting a far-left group of setting it off to protest property foreclosures sought by debt-laden banks.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said the country would "not be terrorised by bullets, bombs or hoods" as judges also vowed not to be cowed.
"Judges and prosecutors are focused on their consitutional duty and are not discouraged by such criminal acts," the judges association said.
The explosion occurred at 0125 GMT outside the Athens appeals court after calls warning of a bomb were made to media outlets, police said.
The blast broke several windows and caused extensive damage to the court's front entrance, where part of the first floor appears to have collapsed.
Windows at nearby buildings were also shattered.
The attack took place just three blocks from the Athens police headquarters, yet the assailants were able to escape.
The bomb was inside a backpack left at the building entrance by two men who then fled in a small van, a police source told AFP.
When a guard inside the building ran towards them, a third person waiting in the van fired a shot at him, but the guard was not hurt, the police said.
It is believed that four people took part in the attack.
Police later found a torched minivan a few blocks from the scene. A bullet casing has also been recovered from near the courthouse.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Police suspect a far-left group calling itself Popular Fighters Squad (OLA), which carried out shooting attacks against the Israeli embassy in 2014 and the German ambassador's residence in 2013.
In 2015, the group exploded a bomb outside the Greek Federation of Enterprises, the country's top industrial lobby.
The attack early yesterday occurred amid a bitter row over foreclosures on properties whose owners have longstanding debts to Greek banks.
The government has proposed new legislation which toughens rules against anti-foreclosure protesters, and the bill was approved by parliament on Thursday.
Foreclosure sales are now increasingly being held online after successive protests, spearheaded by leftist groups, blocked property auctions over the past year.
The protests prompted Greek notaries to repeatedly go on strike to protest a lack of state protection.
The new law extends criminal charges to attempts to block online foreclosure sales.
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