Nikos Androuliakis: It is the wrong strategy to now make a motion of disbelief – Government is morally inferior to circumstances

An attack on the government and personally launched by the President of PASOK, . Speaking to MEGA Nikos Androulakis spoke about “government morally inferior to circumstances” and described the Prime Minister as completely unreliable in terms of government manipulations in the Tempes tragedy. Nikos Androuliakis further pointed out: “Thousands of thousands of Greeks last Sunday said a strong “I don’t forget” and because the Prime Minister knows he has hidden the truth, he ran to change strategy. However, he is fully exposed because there are two possibilities: or he has been making fun of us since the first night – which I believe in – or we are going to his theory that he has been misled, so he is making fun of us for over a year because apparently some have informed him in the course that what he said is not true. But he did not then make an apology, but when he saw the hundreds of thousands of people and learned what comes with the findings, he realized that we would have a political “tsunami” and he once again ran to throw responsibility everywhere except himself.” CORVERSE “The country is not worth having an unreliable Prime Minister, who even in the face of such a tragedy has no limit, has no measure. I am absolutely disappointed and at the same time resented by the way he has handled an unspeakable tragedy. And I think there’s no other way. Mr Mitsotakis cannot, is not standing with these lies and propaganda mechanisms. The motion of mistrust is being made for this government to leave. As I said before, this government is morally inferior to circumstances, so we will take the initiative to put forward a motion of censure,” he added. Commenting on Syriza’s proposal for an immediate submission of a motion of disbelief before the publication of the new elements of the forthcoming findings, Mr.Androulakis explained: “the motion of disbelief may be submitted after six months from the previous one. So if we do it now, we won’t have the right to repeat a request in three weeks or one to two months. I say the logical thing: The most serious thing about families and public opinion is beyond the lies of Mr Mitsotakis, to be aware of the findings, so that when the motion of mistrust is made, there is a clear picture. And not to make it now, to have a worse picture come after the findings but not to apologize for it. I am really surprised that Syriza insists on this wrong strategy.” In response to the government’s argument that the opposition “tools” the tragedy, Mr. Androuliakis stressed: “I want you to compare my expressions and Mr. Mitsotakis’ expressions in similar tragedies, to see who is tooling and who is struggling for truth and justice and to pay the responsible. I want you to think about Mr. Mitsotakis’ line last year in the fires. When almost half of Greece was burned, he said that “we measure burned trees, others measured coffins”. He used a tragedy to reduce his responsibilities toward natural disasters. Isn’t that a tooling? And we say that we who had denounced from the first moment the vulgar way Syriza managed the tragedy in the Eye. Let Mr Mitsotakis not talk about tooling.”