The Greek parliament has lifted the immunity of three neo-Nazi lawmakers so they can be prosecuted for a number of offences, parliament officials said Wednesday.
The vote late Tuesday allows investigators to probe Golden Dawn party spokesman Ilias Kassidiaris for complicity in a 2007 armed robbery.
Panayiotis Iliopoulos and George Germenis, who are members of the same far-right party founded in the 1980s, are suspected of abuse of office and destruction of property in attacks against immigrant traders in the Athens area last month.
Kassidiaris shot to notoriety in June when he slapped a left-wing member of parliament in the face and poured a glass of water in the face of another during a television debate ahead of legislative elections in which Golden Dawn won an unprecedented 18 seats.
The party rose to prominence amid a period of severe social upheaval in Greece due to the country’s severe debt crisis.
The parliament vote came on the same day the UN refugee agency joined hands with over 20 human rights groups and non-governmental organisations in urging Athens to oppose a surge in neo-Nazi violence in Greece.
George Tsarbopoulos, who heads the UN High Commissioner for Refugees’ office in Greece, said the country’s authorities had officially spoken out against the threats posed by the far-right movement, but that “in actual fact, nothing has changed”, with impunity remaining the rule.
In September, police opened a probe after Golden Dawn released a video of its activists in uniform checking the identity documents of immigrant traders before destroying their stalls and merchandise.
Greek parliament lifts neo-Nazi lawmakers' immunity