Immigrants 'interrogated over London bombs'

A Greek lawyer claimed seven Pakistani immigrants were abducted and questioned by British security agents in Greece following the July 7 bomb attacks in London.

Immigrants 'interrogated over London bombs'

A Greek lawyer claimed seven Pakistani immigrants were abducted and questioned by British security agents in Greece following the July 7 bomb attacks in London.

Greece’s public order ministry denied any involvement in such an incident.

Lawyer Frangiskos Ragoussis presented Greek politicians with a report yesterday, alleging his clients – who all live in Athens – were interrogated for several days before being released.

“They were asked whether they had relatives in London, who they were in touch with, what those people’s phone numbers were, whether they spoke to them before the bombings and where they lived,” Mr Ragoussis told a radio station.

Mr Ragoussis said he believed his clients had been questioned by British security officers.

He claimed at least another 20 Pakistanis in other parts of Greece were similarly treated after the London Tube bombings, which killed 52 travellers plus four suspected suicide bombers.

In London, a Foreign Office spokesman would not comment on any alleged action by UK security and intelligence services.

Mr Ragoussis said he took his report to parliament after Greek prosecutors failed to act on an earlier complaint. “There was a strange, suspicious silence,” he said. “So I could not wait longer.”

The Greek public order ministry said it had received no formal complaint on the alleged incident.

“No Greek security services were involved,” a ministry announcement said.

The ministry said a Greek prosecutor had ordered a police investigation into the allegations.

Greek foreign minister Petros Molyviatis said he was unaware of the claims.

Nikos Voutsis, spokesman for the small opposition Left Coalition, said his party had raised the issue four times with the government since July.

“It is pathetic that for five months all the Greek authorities have been playing at the game of knowing nothing,” Mr Voutsis said.

A spokesman for the 30,000-strong Pakistani community in Greece said the alleged detainees were verbally abused by three men – two of whom spoke to them in English – but were not otherwise harmed.

Javed Aslam, who filed a formal complaint with authorities on July 29 on behalf of the seven people, said the interrogators’ main questions concerned phonecalls to England.

“All seven were living in the same house. Maybe somebody made a phone call from the house to a friend or relative in England,” Mr Aslam told the AP.

Aslam said the complaint had not drawn any official response. “We have had no answer,” he said. “We are still waiting.”

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