Σάββατο 8 Φεβρουαρίου 2014

Διθύραμβοι των Financial Times για την Χρυσή Αυγή! Την αγάπησε ξαφνικά όπως τον Γιωργάκη;

financial times χρυση αυγη

“Η δολοφονία των μελών της από ακροαριστερή οργάνωση, δημιούργησε μαζικό κύμα υπέρ της”

“Αναλυτές υπολογίζουν πως το ποσοστό που θα λάβει στις Ευρωεκλογές θα κυμανθεί μεταξύ 15 – 20%”!

“Δεν είμαστε ούτε εξτρεμιστές, ούτε φασίστες, ούτε νεοναζί όπως μας χαρακτηρίζουν”.

Αυτά είναι τα βασικά σημεία του διθυραμβικού αφιερώματος των Financial Times για την Χρυσή Αυγή που την δείχνει δεύτερο κόμμα στις Ευρωεκλογές.

Πως είναι δυνατόν η συγκεκριμένη εφημερίδα να κάνει τέτοιο αφιέρωμα που πρακτικά ανάγει την ΧΑ σε αξιωματική αντιπολίτευση;

Τι συνέβει λοιπόν; Αγάπησε ξαφνικά το ανθελληνικό κεφάλαιο την Χρυσή Αυγή, όπως έκανε με τον Γιώργο Παπανδρέου;

Η απάντηση μπορεί να δοθεί από τις στενές σχέσεις που διατηρεί η εφημερίδα με τον Σόρος αλλά και το σύστημα Κλίντον Μπράιζα με την ολέθρια δράση στην Θράκη. Για κάποιον περίεργο λόγο, πιστεύουν ότι η ΧΑ θα εξυπηρετησει τους σκοπούς τους. Δεν μπορεί να είναι απλά η αβάντα του κόμματος για το ξεπούλημα της Αγροτικής που καταλήγει στον Σόρος.

Ίσως η απάντηση μπορεί να δοθεί ιστορικά. Όπως η χούντα εξυπηρέτησε τις μεθοδεύσεις Κίσινγκερ παρά τις όποιες προθέσεις είχε, μπορεί αυτό το ανθελληνικό – φιλοτουρκικό σύστημα να κρίνει πως με την ΧΑ στην εξουσία θα εξυπηρετηθούν οι ολέθριες προθέσεις σε Θράκη και Αιγαίο. Άλλωστε μία κυβέρνηση Χρυσής Αυγής θα έδινε το δικαίωμα “στις εγγυήτριες δυνάμεις να επέμβουν” με το πρόσχημα της “προστασίας της τουρκικής μειονότητας”. Έτσι θα ολοκληρωνόταν το σχέδιο που ξεκινησε ο Παπανδρέου με την ακύρωση του αγωγού αφού η Θράκη ως Κόσοβο θα ήταν ένα εξυπηρετικό προτεκτοράτο. Η διεθνής κοινότητα θα το ανεχόταν αφού “η Ελλάδα θα είχε ναζιστική κυβέρνηση”.

Το τι από αυτά θα επιτύχουν θα το δείξει το μέλλον. Μεχρι στιγμής πάντως το σχέδιο που εφάρμοσαν από το 2008 φαίνεται πως προχωρά.

Διαβάστε το άρθρο:

Sitting in a cramped office decorated in Greece’s blue-and-white national colours, Ilias Kasidiaris talks about his plans to run for mayor of Athens – from a prison cell.

“The government’s aim is to put me in jail before the elections so that I don’t have the right to speak in public,” he says. “But I will still be a candidate unless they pass a special law stripping me of my political rights.

Such are the campaign considerations these days for Greece’s far-right Golden Dawn party. Its neo-Nazi founder, Nikos Mihaloliakos, is already in jail awaiting trial on charges of running a criminal organisation.

As a result, Mr Kasidiaris, the party spokesman, has acquired the role of acting leader even though he, too, faces criminal charges. A former Greek army commando, the 35-year-old shot to prominence during a general election campaign in 2012, when he threw a glass of water at a leftwing parliamentary candidate and slapped a former communist lawmaker on a breakfast television show.

He is accused of racism and hate speech, yet video-clips on You Tube of his speeches in parliament attract hundreds of thousands of hits.

“We are not extremists, fascists or neo-Nazis, as they claim. They just want to block a popular nationalist organisation. And unfortunately there are judges in Greece who serve political interests,” Mr Kasidiaris said in an interview at the party’s headquarters, a modest Athens office building whose most remarkable feature is a heavy steel door securing its entrance.

Support for Golden Dawn fell sharply after a party supporter confessed to the fatal stabbing last year of Pavlos Fyssas, an anti-fascist rapper, following an argument in a bar. Yet it has since rebounded to about 10 per cent, according to recent opinion polls.

The revenge killing of two Golden Dawn members in a drive-by shooting outside a party office in suburban Athens, which was claimed by a leftwing extremist group, triggered a wave of sympathy.

Some analysts now predict that Golden Dawn could win 15-20 per cent of the vote in May’s European parliament elections – even challenging the centre-right New Democracy party of Antonis Samaras, the prime minister, for second place behind the far-left Syriza party, the main opposition.

Based on its alleged criminal activity, it is widely expected that Golden Dawn will be banned from participating in that contest. Yet the party has already drawn up a contingency plan to ensure its survival: A new political party, National Dawn, was officially registered last month by 200 Greeks who are supporters but not members of Golden Dawn.

“The government wants to outlaw Golden Dawn, which would amount to a coup and be destructive of the political system. National Dawn has been set up to represent the millions of Greek patriots in this country and contest the elections if we are banned,” he said.

“National Dawn will run a full list of very reputable candidates – retired army generals, university professors, respected doctors. They’ll get strong support from the rising numbers of nationalist voters in Greece,” he added.

The popularity of a party with neo-Nazi roots and symbols in a country brutalised by the Nazi Germany in the second world war may confound many. To Mr Kasidiaris, Golden Dawn’s appeal is straightforward: it stems from its willingness to provide support for ordinary Greeks hit hard by the economic crisis, and its no-holds-barred criticism of the political establishment.

“We’re the only party that supports Greek citizens suffering hardship because of the recession, through regular food distributions and medical help offered free of charge by doctors working with us,” he said.

Golden Dawn’s 18 lawmakers contribute 60 per cent of their monthly salary of €6,000 to social welfare operations, he said. But food distributions have been cut back following an overwhelming vote by parliament to scrap the party’s €850,000 annual grant from the state budget.

“We want a thorough cleansing of the political system, a real catharsis. The politicians who have stolen billions from the taxpayers over the years must give the money back and go to jail, “ he said, citing recent scandals over the alleged payment of bribes in defence procurement deals.

Asked about scores of violent attacks on immigrants allegedly carried out by Golden Dawn supporters – documented by Greek anti-racist groups and international organisations such as Doctors of the World – Mr Kasidiaris pleads ignorance.

“We don’t know who’s responsible for such things,” he said. “But our position on immigrants is quite clear: the law must be applied. People who enter Greece without papers must be deported back to where they came from. We shouldn’t make reception centres for them when thousands of Greeks are homeless.”

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