#nikos-romanos — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #nikos-romanos, aggregated by home.social.
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Freedom News: **Athens explosion: Marianna M sentenced to 19 years**
https://freedomnews.org.uk/2026/04/27/athens-explosion-marianna-m-sentenced-to-19-years/
Eight years sentence for Dimitra Z; Nikos Romanos and two others acquitted ~ Cristina Sykes ~ Eighteen months after an explosion in Athens claimed …
The post Athens explosion: Marianna M sentenced to 19 years appeared first on Freedom News.
#News #Athens #Greece #KyriakosXymitris #MariannaM #NikosRomanos -
Freedom News: **Athens explosion: Marianna M sentenced to 19 years**
https://freedomnews.org.uk/2026/04/27/athens-explosion-marianna-m-sentenced-to-19-years/
Eight years sentence for Dimitra Z; Nikos Romanos and two others acquitted ~ Cristina Sykes ~ Eighteen months after an explosion in Athens claimed …
The post Athens explosion: Marianna M sentenced to 19 years appeared first on Freedom News.
#News #Athens #Greece #KyriakosXymitris #MariannaM #NikosRomanos -
Ampelokipi Case – Statement of Anarchist Comrade Nikos Romanos (Athens, Greece)
Ampelokipi Case – 8th Trial – 17/04/2026
Nikos Romanos: I am here after almost 18 months of arbitrary and vindictive detention. I also want to contribute to the restoration of the truth with my statement. In general, I believe that the only reason I am here is my past. And I will explain later why I say this.
First of all, let me repeat here, as I have said from the beginning, that I have nothing to do with this specific case. I have not committed any of the offenses attributed to me and I believe that this entire story, this entire path that has led me here, is the result of a revenge that has brought me to this objectively unfavourable position.
Before we get to how I ended up here, let me tell you that since my release in 2019 I have had an active social and political life. As for my social life, I will not describe it to you because the witnesses have described it and I do not want to repeat things. I want to say more things that have not been heard.
I would like to talk to you about the difficulties that have to do with the adaptation of a person who is released from prison after 7 years. Difficulties that have to do with the obligations – at least as I perceived them – towards my family environment, which has supported me from the first moment of my arrest until today. Some other formal obligations that I tried to fulfil in many ways. And schematically, what should be captured here as an experience is the image of a person who has just been released from prison.
Prison is the land of frozen time. There is a rudimentary social life. Outside, everyone moves forward, relationships develop, everyone makes their choices, people change, mutate, all the things that happen happen. And, when it is a long-term confinement, when you come out, you essentially come out of a refrigerator. You try to come face to face with material reality. A reality which has changed since the last time you remember it, possibly rapidly. You are called to be able to cope with this, to try to lift weights, something that you had not done in all the previous years. Because, in a way, in the previous years, others lifted the weights for you. So, I want to present them in a way that draws on personal experience. So that it can also be understood by you.
I tried, anyway, to adapt to this reality. To get back in touch with the people I had left behind. For example, high school seniors, some of my friends. I had had very little contact with these people until then, i.e. we would say a “happy new year”, a “happy birthday”. All of this was a difficult and arduous process. I tried to find a job, and I found a job. I tried to build some social relationships, which created joy and pleasure for me, with my family, my partner and with my other friends. Essentially, I started to make some plans for my life, some plans. This is a schematic description of my social life.
At the same time, I obviously had a political life, a public political life. I participated in cultural and all kinds of other events. I participated in demonstrations, obviously. I participated in demonstrations for issues that raised awareness, for prisoners’ rights, in events with the bar association, for criminal codes. We have coexisted with several lawyers in such events, whether they are from the anarchist space or from the left. We have been in such places.
Again, to record this specific experience, I want to say that for me the most important moment in my political life, the most important thing I did from my release until today, was the restoration of the monument of Alexandros Grigoropoulos and the event that was held in connection with it. I believe that, in a way, an attempt was made to restore a monument that was in decay. And to give some meanings, some narratives, some testimonies so that the memory of the people who lost their lives in the way they did could be “conveyed”.
So, these are schematically the social and political life I’ve had from 2019 onwards.
This was violently interrupted with my arrest outside my parents’ house, in Papanastasiou Street. Essentially, I experience it as a déjà vu, because I have gone through all these stages. It was like a trauma that reopens and repeats itself. Quite a bad experience. Unfortunately, I have had the misfortune to go through these processes many times. After a while, when I understood what was happening, I had exactly in my head what was going to happen. That is, that I would be treated like a prize, there would be the channels, and that would be the framework. I would be sold as a product of political marketing. All these things, which unfortunately you cannot avoid. I was aware that they would happen from the moment I understood what was being attributed to me, because at first I did not understand.
And the most important thing about this is that I actually experienced, and I’m here with all that has happened, for a choice that I didn’t make. On the contrary, in the past, for the choices I had made, I always took responsibility. I defended them. And I didn’t just defend them to a friend. I defended them publicly, I defended them in courtrooms like this one. I stood before my real judges and explained in detail what the history is, what the social context is within which I made certain choices. Choices that are a part of my existence, no one denies that.
As well as, I have been in courts where I have been accused of things I have not done. And these, the truth is that there were not a few – if I am asked I can list them for you. With elements that were without criminal significance, where they were part of a broader context of that period. In these courts, the reason I continued and went and said “I have nothing to do with it”, was not because I sought better criminal treatment – because my criminal treatment was horrible anyway. I simply sought the restoration of the truth. Everyone will face the consequences of their choices, for what they have made. Not for what they have not done.
So, right now I’m in a Kafkaesque situation, that’s how I characterize it. It centres on a tragic incident, where a man, the anarchist Kyriakos Xymitiris, lost his life, his partner, Marianna Manoura, was seriously injured, and a load of people have had problems in their daily lives. A truly tragic incident.
A tragic incident that has been politically instrumentalized from the very beginning, and I consider my own case to be the icing on the cake of this instrumentalization. This instrumentalization has stages: it started from point zero and reached the final point, within which various incidents developed: media, police, etc. Essentially, what I wonder, and I am expressing it here publicly, is how much discussion can there be about a bag?
I repeat again, for things that I have done, I have no problem taking responsibility for my choices, defending them, exposing them, formulating the context in which they were made and facing the consequences of the law on the part of the state. In this case, however, I have not made any choice, I have not done anything. And I find myself here, essentially, having to prove that I am not an elephant. Within a context that says “there is a bag”. And then a criminalization of the bag begins which says “this bag had 2 fingerprints”. “No, after all, it did not have 2, it had 102 fingerprints”. “Yes, but it was “this way”” or “it was different”. The persecutory – let each one put a characterization – narratives are constantly changing. And I am in a position where I have an unchanging, fixed view from the beginning: I say that no matter what happens, I cannot know when I came into contact with a bag. If I said that I remember, it would be hypocritical. It would be hypocritical to say, “Yes, I remember this bag.” No matter what questions are asked, I cannot know. No matter how much I think about it, all I can do is speculate. And because you talked about probability theory, probabilities remain probabilities. One can only speculate, only scenarios, only versions. To answer and say when I came into contact with a bag is something that I am unable to do.
Concluding this brief apology of mine – because I believe that I have nothing more to contribute to the case – I want to reiterate that I am not in a position to know the path of the bag. All I can do is make assumptions. I believe that no matter how many assumptions I make, I do not come to a conclusion that I can be certain of. To repeat what I said before, I have nothing to do with the case. I have paid more than enough for the choices I made. At this moment I am being asked to pay for something that I did not make and I believe that this is unfair.
I would consider it more honest – although “honest” is a big word, I would consider it better, if someone told me “you know what, you’re going to jail because we don’t like you, because we don’t like you, because we think you’re a person who should pay for certain things”. I consider that more honest and, in part, it’s also defensible. To know that I’m in jail because I know that certain circles don’t like me. To be in jail and the argument being a bag, from my point of view, is incomprehensible.
Thank you for your time.
Translated by Act for freedom now!
https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=31853 #AmpelokipiCase #AnarchistPrisoners #athens #europe #greece #NikosRomanos -
Trial of Greek Anarchist Over Apartment Explosion Opens in Athens
> The trial of Nikos Romanos, 33, and four other defendants over an explosion in 2024 in an apartment in Athens that left one person dead started on Wednesday in Athens.
> Romanos is accused of participating in a terrorist organisation and the manufacture of explosive devices. He has pleaded not guilty. -
Trial of Greek Anarchist Over Apartment Explosion Opens in Athens
> The trial of Nikos Romanos, 33, and four other defendants over an explosion in 2024 in an apartment in Athens that left one person dead started on Wednesday in Athens.
> Romanos is accused of participating in a terrorist organisation and the manufacture of explosive devices. He has pleaded not guilty. -
International Week of Solidarity Action with Imprisoned Comrades of Ampelokipi Case and in Memory of Kyriakos Xymitiris
We call for an International Week of Solidarity Action (24-31 March) with the imprisoned comrades for Ampelokipi case and in memory of the anarchist armed fighter Kyriakos Xymitiris.
These days before the beginning of the trial on the 1st of April at Athens Court of Appeal, we call for comrades around the world to participate, in order to collectively fight for our comrades’ Marianna Manoura, Dimitra Zarafeta, Dimitris, Nikos Romanos and for A.K’s release, as well as defend the memory of our comrade Kyriakos Xymitiris.
Our support and solidarity is non-negotiable and in the battle they are facing -at court this time- we will stand by their side.
Solidarity Manifestation Friday 27/3, 7pm at Syntagma Square (Athens, Greece)
Solidarity manifestation (beginning of the trial) Wednesday 1/4, 8.30am, Athens Court of Appeal
FREE COMRADES MARIANNA MANOURA, DIMITRA ZARAFETA, DIMITRIS, NIKOS ROMANOS AND A.K.
KYRIAKOS XIMITIRIS ALWAYS PRESENT
STATES ARE THE ONLY TERRORISTS
Solidarity Assembly for the imprisoned,
fugitives and persecuted fighters
https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=30089 #AmpelokipiCase #AnarchistPrisoners #DimitraZ #europe #greece #KyriakosXymitiris #MariannaM #NikosRomanos
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Tasikmalaya, Indonesia: Incendiary Attack on Police Post
“I have dreamed of a world in flames, rolling into infinity and throwing hot meteors and sparks into the starry spaces.”
~ Bruno Filippi
We once again take responsibility for an attack against a police post on December 17, 2024, in the Tasikmalaya region of West Java.
We are a small revolutionary nucleus formed by resistance consciousness, a fusion of collectivities and free individuals! There will be more attacks to destroy the state and its institutions!
This responsibility claim is addressed to Nikos Romanos, Alfredo Cospito and all the imprisoned members of the FAI/IRF (Informal Anarchist Federation/International Revolutionary Front) around the world. You are not alone!
Because no one deserves to be imprisoned!
Until everyone is free!
Fire to the prisons!!!
Free Union of the Autonomous Fire
Source: Blessed Flame, Issue 3
https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=13785
#AlfredoCospito #anarchist #asia #DirectAction #indonesia #NikosRomanos
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Bandung, Indonesia: Attack on Police Post for Nikos Romanos, Sidiq, and All Victims Killed by Police
We claim that the attack and arson of a police post in Bandung, West Java on December 13, 2024 coincided with World Anti-Police Day. This attack and arson is in solidarity with our imprisoned comrade Nikos Romanos, as well as Sidiq and all imprisoned anarchists. This attack is also in solidarity with the victims of police brutality who have lost their lives all over the world and in this fascist country. Police agencies will never disintegrate on their own just like the state, they must be destroyed!
Until all are free!
Until all prisons are destroyed!
Fire on the prisons!Free Association of Autonomous Fire
https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=13128
#anarchist #arson #asia #bandung #DirectAction #indonesia #NikosRomanos
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Athens, Greece: Letter from Anarchist Comrade Nikos Romanos from Korydallos Prison
Monday, November 18, was the day when time stopped for me once again. Hooded anti-terrorism officers, handcuffs, holding cells, television cameras, news bulletins, journalistic scripts, police theories. Behind this familiar pattern and the communicative storm of guilt, there is another reality.
They are the wounds that resurface and multiply, shattering families, destroying human relationships, annihilating dreams, hopes, plans of a life condemned once again to the death of frozen time.
Because the language of truth cannot be hidden, I repeat, I deny the indictment in its entirety. An unfounded, baseless, exaggerated, and unsubstantiated indictment that arises abusively, creating more questions than it actually answers. Following the established political logic of the anti-terrorism law, which creates a category of defendants that exists outside the legal system, since everyone is guilty until proven innocent. The language spoken by the system has already issued its verdict. I became a wandering trophy for all kinds of exploitation. An exhibit in the showcases of the museums of lies and oblivion. With the label of “terrorist” hanging on the annex “guilty of all times,” for observation by usually naive, but mainly scared and peace-loving visitors.
For those who gamble with human lives in the dice of a vulgar and shameless political game, for those who believe that the power they hold gives them the ability to crush souls for their own reasons, I will reiterate the obvious.
From the bloodied pedestrian street of Messolonghi, the interrogation offices, the gray corridors of the prisons, the court benches, the slow death of confinement. From the choices I made with all my soul, choices etched in real blood, at great cost and with unyielding knees, I do not yield an inch.
It is part of the history of a generation of people who revolted and on whose backs, large parts of the political system washed away its sins by hanging it out to dry on the lines of repressive and media cannibalism.
But now I am not in prison because I made conscious choices that carried corresponding risks. On the contrary, my life is sold as a political product, on the shelf of the communication supermarket, with the price of the bag charged to me, waiting for prospective voters to shop piece by piece until the next time.
It is truly sad for me (and not just me) that I will be called upon to prove that I am not an elephant, having an impending sentence hanging over my head that will condemn me to live again, for an indefinite period, as a prisoner.
I have lived half of my adult life in prison. I will not passively accept this such an unfair statistic, consisting of much pain and countless loneliness, to cover me in concrete and bars.
I will not accept extreme measures like pre-trial detention without a legal and political battle to win back my life.
In this hasty and necessary initial statement, I want to thank from the depths of my heart those who stood by me with selfless love. The fight for my vindication and my definitive release from this unjust indictment now begins.
In conclusion…
Honor to those who in their lives have appointed and guard the Thermopylae. Never moving from duty; just and upright in all their actions, but with sorrow and compassion; brave when they are rich, and when they are poor, still somewhat brave, again assisting as much as they can; always speaking the truth, but without hatred for the liars. And more honor is due to them when they foresee (and many foresee) that the Ephialtes will appear in the end, and the Medes will finally cross.
Constantine Cavafy
Source: athens.indymedia
Translation: Dark Nights
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Realities Behind the Arrest of Nikos Romanos
This is an attempt to provide information and context for those outside Greece concerning the recent state abduction of anarchist Nikos Romanos.
On 31 October, 2024, an explosion in the Athens neighborhood of Ampelokopoi killed the comrade Kyriakos X and severely injured the comrade Marianna M.
They were both in an apartment where an explosive device detonated, knocking out one wall of the building. The state claims they were planning to detonate a bomb elsewhere and that it exploded prematurely. Both Kyriakos and Marianna are anarchists, respected participants in the movement.
The press in Greece is owned by a handful of old families who control most of the remaining greek assets– those that haven’t been sold off to foreign investors. The Greek mainstream media exists to disseminate state narratives, and it immediately began slandering the victims of the explosion as well as engaging in wild speculation– such as that the israeli embassy was the intended target. Whether or not that’s true, it is true that israeli mossad agents came to assist the Greek police in their investigations. Since the explosion, the state has made additional arrests of people it claims are somehow connected to the apartment and its lease, sublease, etc.
As the Greek press promoted the propaganda of the state, there commenced activity in some cowardly corners of the left to distinguish the more “guilty” of those accused from the others. This is the question of who to tar with the labels of “anarchist” and “terrorist” — thereby assumed to deserve repression– vs. who is really “innocent.”
The anarchist movement itself, both in Greece and internationally, has rejected such division and remained strong in solidarity despite a chilling increase in repression. There were multiple support gatherings outside the hospital where Marianna was held under guard and when, shortly after her second surgery, she was transferred to Korydallos prison, comrades also gathered there. Kyriakos has been honored with actions, banners, marches, events and memorials, and will remain a beloved comrade forevermore. There has been no “disavowal,” no step back.
Since the tragedy in Ampelokopoi state repression against those suspected of being “anarchists” has become more aggressive, although this is consistent with an ongoing trend since the pandemic. What we have seen now are not new tactics but an increase in frequency: police actions such as stopping and searching people around the neighborhood Exarcheia, early-morning “preventative detention” of targeted individuals (people considered politically prominent) on the days of demonstrations and marches, and an increase in surveillance of those the greek state has a grudge against, including by parking unmarked cars with surveillance equipment in front of their homes.
Few people in the anarchist movement here have been under as heavy surveillance, long-term, as the comrade Nikos Romanos. He was a friend of the anarchist Alexis Grigoropolous, and witnessed Alexis’ murder by police on 6 December 2008. Since that time Nikos has been arrested many times and accused of many crimes, along with false accusations of involvement with the direct action group Conspiracy of Cells of Fire.
Because Nikos is a living witness to the shameful conduct of the state, he has been labeled a terrorist by politicians and the mass media many times over. Of their many accusations, however, the only crime the judiciary has ever pinned on him is a bank robbery, for which he served a prison sentence. During the time he was imprisoned, Nikos went on hunger strike for 31 days to (successfully) demand access to education, something he was entitled to under law but which the state had refused him. His steadfastness in this matter inspired solidarity actions throughout Greece and internationally, and is still well remembered.
Again, there are few people in Greece as relentlessly surveilled as Nikos, which made it all the more absurd that he was arrested on 18 November and accused of unspecified involvement in the explosion, on the basis of the state claiming to have discovered a single fingerprint from him on a trash bag “found” in the destroyed apartment.
Some or all of the above you may already know. The purpose of this piece is to contextualize the arrest and repression of Nikos in Greece’s overall economic collapse and the scandals of the Greek state’s ruling party, New Democracy, as well as to condemn those who respond to the greek state’s abuse of Nikos with gleeful excitement (because they anticipate spectacular resistance) and those who promote state narratives about Nikos, including the lie– proven to be a lie in court! — that he was involved in the group Conspiracy of Cells of Fire.
Nikos has been put through hell by the state for nearly his entire life, from the horror of watching his childhood friend murdered in front of his eyes to years of repression, intimidation, violence, false accusations and imprisonment. Anyone who repeats the state and state-media slanders about Nikos, using buzzwords like “terrorist” or breathlessly associating him with guerrilla groups he wasn’t involved in, is promoting the state’s narrative and serving the greek state’s agenda.
On 22 November, the state used the flimsy pretext of the fingerprint to imprison Nikos more or less indefinitely, pre-trial, furthering the outrage. Even some of the right-wing TV talking heads were at a loss to explain this, which only provides (additional) evidence that the supposedly impartial judiciary of Greece is no more than a weapon of the ruling class, in this case of Prime Minister Mitsotakis and New Democracy.
Nikos is being held under article 187A, an antiterrorism statute passed by the “progressive” socialist government previous to new democracy. The excuse for 187A at the time was that it was necessary to prosecute Golden Dawn, a neo-fascist organization– but it wasn’t used for that. Instead, we see in the detention of Nikos the penal code’s true purpose. All state tools of “anti-extremism,” including those that claim to be protection from fascists or to repress the far right, will end up used against anarchists.
Article 187A, which applies to terrorist organizations, states that a terrorist organization must be at least three people. So, we have the martyr Kyriakos, the injured Marianna… and because the state needed a third, like magic, they discover a bag with a fingerprint and kidnap Nikos.
Prime Minister Mitsotakis went and toured the site of the explosion personally, a bizarre and cynical media circus, and then pulled a true Reality TV stunt: he announced that a benevolent construction company (also, of course, owned by one of Greece’s ruling families) would be providing free reconstruction of the building to give the other residents homes again.
The recent imprisonment of Nikos is likewise a stunt, but a cruel, barbaric stunt using a man’s life and freedom to try and score political points. Not only has New Democracy been delegitimized by scandals– to name just a few: a mass-casualty train crash directly caused by austerity and privatization, deliberate mass drownings of immigrants, and being caught using illegal israeli spyware to monitor political rivals– but the economy of Greece is collapsing. Rent in most cities is unaffordable relative to wages, the healthcare system is being stripped for parts, and the schools are in shambles.
The abduction of Nikos Romanos is a provocation by the ruling party towards the anarchist movement, timed immediately after the anniversary of the Polytechnic uprising and just before the anniversary of the police murder of Alexis. Mitsotakis wants to focus attention on the anarchists, because his coalition of neoliberal austerity privatizers is losing ground to a growing fringe far-right. Arbitrarily imprisoning a high-profile anarchist (and thus perhaps triggering a response) is perfect red meat for the kind of reactionary droolers who have been lately abandoning the technocratic soft-authoritarianism of new democracy for more overtly fascist political parties.
We can see the heavy hand of the Greek state in not just conventional media, but social media. Shameless, ignorant, parastatal parasitic “extremism” experts parrot the lies of Nikos’ involvement in matters he was acquitted of, reactionaries and liberals casually refer to Nikos as a “terrorist,” and Facebook auto-bans Nikos’ name, much as it did the name of the revolutionary Dimitris Koufontinas during his 2021 prison hunger strike.
There is a parallel to the case of Tasos Theophilou, an anarchist-communist who was sentenced to 25 years in prison for a bank robbery he didn’t commit. Tasos also was falsely accused of membership in Conspiracy of Cells of Fire (despite not sharing their ideology), and the state’s evidence against him was the anti-terrorism task force claiming they found his DNA on a hat near the bank– although the hat in question wasn’t in the list of items collected and photographed at the scene of the robbery.
Although Tasos’ conviction was eventually overturned and he successfully sued the state for his five years of false imprisonment, the government and its media parrots defamed Tasos for years based on these false accusations. After all, he’s an anarchist!
There are many more instances and incidents I could invoke here, but I hope that this helps establish that
1.) the arbitrary imprisonment of Nikos in the wake of an unrelated tragedy is a sick political game by the state, and
2.) those who accept and repeat the Greek state’s lies about Nikos are de facto agents of state repression.
Let us reject not only the continued abuse of Nikos Romanos and other prisoners by the state, but the state’s narratives and slanders.
As has been said elsewhere, “May Athens get the December it deserves”
https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=12672
#anarchism #europe #greece #insurrection #NikosRomanos #repression
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Nikos Romanos Taken to the Prosecutor’s Office After His Arrest in the Ampelokipi Case
This morning, 19 November, anarchist comrade Nikos Romanos, who was arrested yesterday as he was returning to his home, is being brought to the prosecutor’s office, with the media having already started their classic scapegoating, condemning him without yet being found guilty.
The reason for the arrest is a fingerprint detected in one of the findings found in the apartment that was blown up in Ampelokipi, Athens, which led to the death of comrade Kyriakos and the serious injury of comrade Marianna. In particular, a fingerprint was found on a bag containing a weapon. The weapon, after a ballistic test, proved to be unused.
For our international readers, we remind that Nikos Romanos is known not only within the anarchist circles, but in the wider Greek society in general, since he was a friend of Alexis Grigoropoulos and an eyewitness to his murder, which triggered the 2008 uprising. He had previously been convicted to 18 years in prison for possessing and planting explosive devices in 2012, which reduced to 14 years, and to an 11-year sentence for participating in two bank robberies in Kozani. He was finally released in July 2019 due to good behavior.
In prison he received the support of thousands of people, not only from the movement, which led to a mass mobilization in the streets supporting his hunger strike, and eventually his thirst strike, which he went on because the authorities did not approve the permits required to attend his classes in the school in which he was enrolled.
Source: Blessed is the flame
Spanish translation: La Zarzamora
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Athens, Greece: Anarchist Comrade Nikos Romanos Arrested by Anti-Terrorist Cops
Word comes to us from comrades in Greece that anarchist comrade Nikos Romanos has been arrested by anti-terrorist cops during an operation today in Athens and has been take to the GADA (Athens Central Police Headquarters). All we know so far is that he has been arrested in connection with the same case involving the explosion at an apartment in the neighborhood of Ampelokipoi in Athens on 31st October.
Strength and complicity comrade, you will not be left alone!
DN Collective
[URGENT] Call for a solidarity gathering at GADA, 9pm
We are calling for a solidarity gathering with the 31-year-old detainee today at 9 PM, at GADA.
NO ONE ALONE/NO ONE IN THE HANDS OF THE STATE
SOLIDARITY WITH THE IMPRISONED COMRADES MARIANNA, DIMITRA, AND DIMITRIS
KYRIAKOS XYMITIRIS ONE OF US A COMRADE FOREVER ON THE STREETS OF FIRE
SOLIDARITY IS OUR WEAPON
Assembly of Solidarity with imprisoned, fugitive, and persecuted fighters
Source: athens.indymedia
Translation: Dark Nights