Explosive Device Detonates Outside Athens Church, Injuring Two People

Explosive Device Detonates Outside Athens Church, Injuring Two People
A Greek Orthodox priest arrives at the Saint Dionysios church, following the detonation of an explosive device in Athens on Dec. 27, 2018. (Reuters/Michalis Karagiannis)
Reuters
12/27/2018
Updated:
12/27/2018

ATHENS (Reuters)—An explosive device wounded a police officer and a civilian when it detonated outside a church in central Athens on Dec. 27, shortly before a Christmas holiday service was due to start, police and state media said.

There was no claim of responsibility for the attack outside the Saint Dionysios church in the heavily policed, wealthy Kolonaki quarter, which borders the Exarchia district where clashes between police and anarchists are common.

The blast occurred around 7 a.m. local time, just before the church was due to open for a service.

The police officer and a second person—identified by state TV as the church caretaker—were taken to a hospital and police cordoned off the area. Their injuries were not life-threatening, health officials said.

Witnesses cited by state television suggested the caretaker called police after finding the package. There was no warning call that the device would go off. Police were checking footage from surveillance cameras in the area.

“The blast was not powerful, the officer was injured in the face and hands,” a police official, who declined to be identified, told Reuters.

Police found remnants of a timing device at the site of the blast, the police official said.

Small-scale attacks on businesses, state buildings, police, and politicians are common in Greece, which has a long history of political violence.

“Why this attack at a time when people would gather at the church?” a priest at the church told reporters. “Why are they attacking the love of Christ, what are they trying to say?”

A powerful blast smashed windows and wrecked offices at Greece’s SKAI TV in Athens earlier this month in what officials called an attack on democracy. No one was hurt, and there was no claim of responsibility for that attack.

By George Georgiopoulos