Greek government calls for EU farm scandal probe

Greek government calls for EU farm scandal probe
This picture taken on May 20, 2025, shows a farmer on his tractor plowing a field in front of a solar energy farm near Kastro Viotias. . (File/AFP)
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Updated 15 July 2025
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Greek government calls for EU farm scandal probe

Greek government calls for EU farm scandal probe
  • In May, investigators searched the Athens offices of OPEKEPE and seized documents and electronic equipment
  • They indicated that “a significant number” of people had gained payment rights between 2019 and 2022

ATHENS: The Greek government on Monday called for a special parliamentary committee to probe a European Union farm subsidies scandal, reportedly involving tens of millions of euros, that has seen at least two ministers put under EU investigation.

Government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis said the ruling conservative party would request an investigation into the 27-year operation of the Greek authority for the payment of common agricultural policy aid (OPEKEPE).

“Our proposal concerns the period from the establishment of OPEKEPE in 1998 until today in order to investigate the dysfunctions, identify the problems, and ensure complete transparency,” Marinakis told reporters.

An investigation by EU prosecutors has shown widespread abuse of funds at OPEKEPE, which according to the government annually disburses 2.5 billion euros ($2.9 billion) to nearly 650,000 farmers. Reports said prosecutors suspect tens of millions of euros have been siphoned off.

The investigation period is mostly under the current government, which came to power in July 2019. But the government argues that the fraud has lasted decades.

In nearly 30 years, the Greek state has paid more than 2.7 billion euros in fines, Marinakis said.

Greece’s ruling New Democracy party has a large enough majority in parliament to create the committee on its own.

Last month, a minister who had formerly held the agriculture portfolio resigned, after the European Public Prosecutor’s Office sent a case to parliament on the alleged involvement of two former ministers in Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’s government in the misappropriation of EU funds.

Three junior ministers and another senior government official also submitted their resignations.

In May, investigators searched the Athens offices of OPEKEPE and seized documents and electronic equipment. They indicated that “a significant number” of people had gained payment rights between 2019 and 2022, mainly by falsely claiming public land.


Sheinbaum says US ‘won’t’ attack cartels on Mexican soil

Sheinbaum says US ‘won’t’ attack cartels on Mexican soil
Updated 9 sec ago
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Sheinbaum says US ‘won’t’ attack cartels on Mexican soil

Sheinbaum says US ‘won’t’ attack cartels on Mexican soil
  • Trump has accused Mexico of not doing enough to halt the flow of drugs into the United States
  • US strikes on alleged drug boats in the Pacific and Caribbean in recent weeks have killed at least 65 people

MEXICO CITY: Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Tuesday downplayed the likelihood of US military action against cartels on Mexican soil, following a report that Washington is considering deploying troops south of the border.

“That won’t happen,” Sheinbaum told reporters in response to an NBC News report that President Donald Trump’s administration is planning ground operations against her country’s powerful cartels.

“Furthermore, we do not agree” with any intervention, the left-wing Sheinbaum added.

Trump has accused Mexico of not doing enough to halt the flow of drugs into the United States.

In addition to designating several Mexican cartels as “terrorist” organizations, he offered in April to send troops to Mexico to fight drug cartels, a proposal that Sheinbaum rejected.

During a meeting with Sheinbaum in September, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio praised her anti-drug efforts and vowed the US would respect Mexico’s sovereignty.

But on Monday, NBC reported that the Trump administration has begun training troops and intelligence officers for a potential mission on Mexican soil.

The report, which cited four unnamed current or former US officials, said however that the deployment was “not imminent” and that a final decision had not been made.

An operation inside Mexico would mark a dramatic escalation of Trump’s military campaign against Latin American drug traffickers.

US strikes on alleged drug boats in the Pacific and Caribbean in recent weeks have killed at least 65 people.

So far, most of the strikes have targeted Venezuelan vessels.

But last week, four boats were blown up near Mexico’s territorial waters, resulting in at least 14 deaths.

A Mexican search for one reported survivor proved fruitless.

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