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Greek bank list editor Costas Vaxevanis acquitted | Greek bank list editor Costas Vaxevanis acquitted |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A Greek journalist has been acquitted of breaching privacy for publishing the names of 2,000 suspected tax evaders. | |
Costas Vaxevanis published a list of Greeks with Swiss bank accounts, including a government minister and other prominent figures in public life. | |
Lawyers for Mr Vaxevanis, 46, argued that the charges were outrageous and said no-one on the list had actually complained of a breach of privacy. | |
After a one-day trial, a court in Athens found Mr Vaxevanis innocent. | |
He published the list in Hot Doc, the weekly magazine that he edits. | |
The BBC's Mark Lowen in Athens says the swift ruling will be an embarrassment to the Greek government. | The BBC's Mark Lowen in Athens says the swift ruling will be an embarrassment to the Greek government. |
'Thirsty for blood' | |
Greece is being urged by international lenders to crack down on tax evasion as part of far-reaching reforms demanded in exchange for billions of euros of bailout money. | |
The list of suspected evaders was reportedly leaked by an employee at the HSBC bank and passed to IMF chief Christine Lagarde when she was French finance minister in 2010. | |
Ms Lagarde apparently handed the list to the Greek authorities, but they took no action. | |
Two of Greece's former finance ministers have acknowledged seeing copies of the list. | |
However, Yannis Stournaras, who took office in June, has told parliament he has not seen it. | |
Mr Vaxevanis said he had published the list because it was his job as a journalist to reveal the truth. | |
"The three last governments have lied and have made a mockery of the Greek people with this list," he said. | |
"They were obliged to pass it to parliament or to the justice system. They didn't do it, and they should be in prison for it." | |
Prosecutors had accused him of publicly ridiculing people and delivering them "to a society that is thirsty for blood". | |
"The solution to the problems that the country is facing is not cannibalism," the prosecutor said. | |
But the court took little time in acquitting the journalist, and observers in the courtroom broke out in applause, according to the AFP news agency. |
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