Top Greek politicians facing probe over pharma scandal

The allegations follow a judicial investigation into bribes Swiss drugmaker Novartis allegedly paid to boost the sales and prices of its products in Greece.

February 22, 2018 09:06 am | Updated 09:06 am IST - ATHENS (Greece):

 In this Jan. 24, 2108 file photo, Harry Kirsch, CFO of Swiss pharmaceutical group Novartis, speaks during the annual results media conference at the Novartis Campus in Basel, Switzerland.

In this Jan. 24, 2108 file photo, Harry Kirsch, CFO of Swiss pharmaceutical group Novartis, speaks during the annual results media conference at the Novartis Campus in Basel, Switzerland.

Greek lawmakers were voting early Thursday, following an 18-hour debate, on whether to investigate 10 senior politicians, including two former prime ministers, over allegations they were involved in a pharmaceutical bribery scandal.

The allegations follow a judicial investigation into bribes Swiss drugmaker Novartis allegedly paid to boost the sales and prices of its products in Greece.

The politicians named include current central bank governor and former finance minister Yannis Stournaras and Dimitris Avramopoulos, a European commissioner and former health minister.

Lawmakers were voting on whether to set up a committee to investigate each of the 10. Under Greek law, parliament must first investigate allegations against lawmakers before they can be stripped of immunity and prosecuted by judicial authorities.

With government and opposition parties all backing the investigation either in support of the probe or to clear the names of their colleagues the proposal looked certain to pass.

Officials in the government of left-wing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras have described the alleged bribery scandal as the worst in modern Greek history.

Mr. Tsipras promised that justice would be done.

“We will not cover up [the scandal],” he said during the marathon debate. “The Greek people must learn who turned pain and illness into a means of enrichment.”

All of the politicians implicated angrily denied the allegations, accusing the government of engineering a politically motivated campaign against them. Novartis says it is cooperating with Greek authorities.

“I’m not here to provide answers regarding this despicable libel but to denounce these ridiculous allegations,” conservative former prime minister Antonis Samaras said.

The claims against the politicians stem from testimonies made by protected, anonymous witnesses.

Speaking during the debate, central bank governor Stournaras said secret witness testimonies implicating himself and his wife, who runs a communications and consultancy company specializing in the health sector, were lies, and called for the parliamentary investigative committee to be set up to look into all allegations.

Allegations against the politicians include bribery, breach of duty, and possibly money laundering. But it was unclear what the scope of the investigation would be, given that the statute of limitations regarding politicians is linked to terms of government.

Former caretaker prime minister Panagiotis Pikramenos, his voice at times breaking as he addressed the lawmakers, noted he had only been in office for 35 days at a time of political and economic turmoil in Greece.

“And today, after six years, I find myself before you to face a baseless accusation,” he said, describing the accusations against him as “lies and unacceptable slander.”

Conservative New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis accused the government of “shamelessly and regularly interfering in the work of the judiciary” to undermine its political opponents.

“Who will invest in a country with such a toxic political environment?” he said during the debate late Wednesday.

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