Yugoslav corn scandal
The Yugoslav corn scandal (Greek: σκάνδαλο του γιουγκοσλαβικού καλαμποκιού), also known as Greek maize, was a political corruption scandal in Greece between 1986 and 1990.[1] A total of 20,000 tons[iii] of corn was imported from Yugoslavia in 1986 and falsely labeled as Greek through forged documents. The corn was then exported to other European Economic Community (EEC) countries, allowing the fraudulent claim of $1.5 million in EEC subsidies intended for domestic Greek corn. The state-owned company International Trade Company (ITCO), a government-controlled entity responsible for managing agricultural trade, played a key role in facilitating the fraudulent shipments. After the EEC initiated an investigation, Greek government officials were involved in efforts to cover up the scheme. In 1989, Greece was fined over $3.8 million by the European Court of Justice. Investigations by the Greek Parliament followed, leading to a trial in Greece in 1990, where six individuals, including a deputy minister, were convicted for their involvement.
Crime and cover up
[edit]On 8 May 1986, a ship called Alfonsina (Greek: Αλφονσίνα)[i] reached the port of Thessaloniki carrying 9,000 tons[iii] of corn from Koper in Yugoslavia.[2] However, the documentation stated that the origin of the corn cargo was from Kavala.[2] The company responsible was International Trade Company (ITCO), a state company founded under the PASOK-led government for price control purposes.[2] Its president was Soulis Apostolopoulos.[2] The corn was sold initially to Granomar (a company located in Switzerland) and then to Genk, a Belgian company.[2][3] There were the following benefits from this scheme: the Greek state would avoid paying compensatory (import) levies to the EEC,[4] the state would get the benefit of elevated corn prices at $245 a ton instead of $101 a ton for Yugoslav corn,[3] and, by reporting artificially inflated agricultural productivity, the state would gain access to additional EEC subsidies.[2][5]
News of the corn sale and, allegedly, complaints reached the EEC in Brussels within days. Subsequently, on 17 August 1986, a European committee arrived in Greece to investigate the state's documentation regarding the transactions.[2] Greek officials, under Deputy Minister of Finance Nikos Athanasopoulos ,[ii] assured the committee that the corn was of Greek origin, and forged documents to cover it up.[2] Athanasopoulos also tried to create ways to delay and confuse the inspectors.[3] At some point, Athanasopoulos complained to Emile Mennens, a Belgian member of the investigation committee:[6] "When we the Greeks were building Parthenons, you the barbarians were eating acorns."[2][4]
European trial
[edit]In November 1986, the European Commission pressured the Greek government to provide an explanation for the scandal. However, their request was publicly denied by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Karolos Papoulias.[2] In 1987, the European Commission imposed a fine on Greece of $2.5 million for the illegal transaction.[3] The European Commission brought the case before the European Court of Justice, marking the first instance of the 12-nation European Community being defrauded by one of its members.[3] The particular scandal placed the Greek diplomats and bankers in a difficult position within the European Community, since the culprit was the Greek government rather than an individual; a Greek banker stated, "This really hurt our image".[3] The Greek government refused to participate in the trial proceedings. European investigations found at least two fraudulent corn shipments; the second shipment was 11,000 tons[iii] of corn arriving by train to Thessaloniki and loaded onto a cargo ship to be sold in Belgium as Greek corn.[3] On 21 September 1989, the trial concluded without the participation of the Greek government, which was fined $3.8 million, which included the initial fine, the expenses of the court, and interest.[7][8]
June elections
[edit]PASOK lost in the June 1989 elections due in part to the Koskotas scandal, which implicated PASOK members, and the over 200 scandals reported over the course of PASOK administrations from 1981 to 1989.[9] The conservative New Democracy and the united leftist parties under Synaspismos, despite being on opposite ideological sides and having fought against each other in the Greek Civil War (1946–1949), formed a coalition government committed to cleansing the state ("Catharsis") of corruption scandals associated with members of PASOK.[10][11]
Greek trial
[edit]Only days after the formation of the coalition government, the Hellenic Parliament commenced procedures to lift the parliamentary immunity of Athanasopoulos. A 12-member committee began an investigation of the alleged fraudulent activity surrounding the importing and export sale of Yugoslav corn.[11] Witnesses who worked at the ports through which the corn shipment passed, testified that Athanasopoulos gave instructions to not report the corn.[11] On 23 August 1989, Athanasopoulos confessed during the procedures but argued that the decision for the cover-up was taken after discussions with his colleagues (without naming them) on the grounds of "national duty and obligation".[2][12] Specifically, he argued, "responsible ministers had decided to cover up the scandal in the country's interests [...] Otherwise, it would have been disclosed that a state-controlled company was violating Community regulations, which would have been damaging to the country's prestige in the E.C. [European Community]".[13] Akis Tsochatzopoulos, a PASOK deputy, argued that the scandal was due to tense competition between multinational corporations.[4] In January 1990, Athanasopoulos and the company's president, who owned the corn cargo, were remanded in custody.[4]
The Greek courts indicted Athanasopoulos for exporting Yugoslav corn as Greek, so that ITCO, the state-controlled export company, could pocket $1.5 million in European Common Market subsidies.[14] The specific charges were instigation in issuing false certificates, forgery and complicity in forgery.[4] The trial was conducted by a 12-member special court by the Supreme Court of Greece, Areios Pagos.[13] In addition to the "national interests" argument, Athanasopoulos' defense rested on the assertion that the statute of limitations had expired, as well as claims of procedural irregularities.[12] Thirteen former ministers were witnesses for the defense, and they all used the "national interest" argument.[15] Historian Richard Clogg described Athanasopoulos' defense as an effort to portray the defrauding of the EEC as a patriotic duty.[16] However, the court unanimously rejected Athanasopoulos' defense arguments. On 11 August 1990, Athanasopoulos was found guilty and sentenced to three and a half years in prison.[17][12] The president of the company was sentenced to three years and eight months in prison.[4] Four officials tried with him also received prison sentences ranging from 10 to 18 months.[17][18]
The trial was broadcast live with state and private television channels focusing on different aspects of the developments inside and outside the courtroom, depending on their political affiliation.[19] In the pro-PASOK press and radio strongly criticized witnesses for the prosecution as traitors to the nation.[15] During the trial, PASOK supporters gathered outside the court, and they disapproved of the court's decision by shouting "Shame" (Greek: Αίσχος) and chanting the Cretan song Pote Tha Kanei Xasteria.[4]
Aftermath
[edit]The decision on Athanasopoulos, according to judicial sources, gave "the green light" to initiate trials against other former PASOK government members, including Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou, for their involvement in the "mega-scandal"[20] Koskotas scandal and widespread surveillance of political opponents.[12] Athanasopoulos served nine months,[6] at the Korydallos Prison.[21] He was the only politician imprisoned for PASOK's scandals of the late 1980s.[6] A few months later, Menios Koutsogiorgas spent three months in jail pending the Koskotas trial but died on the witness stand, and all prison verdicts were redeemable through monetary compensation. Athanasopoulos was re-elected to Parliament following his release, representing Athens B constituency in the 1993 Greek parliamentary election.[21] On 17 January 1994, the newly installed PASOK government granted a pardon to Athanasopoulos.[4]
Levels of corruption in Greek politics remained consistently high under administrations in the 1986-1997 period, regardless of their political orientation, according to a 2003 study,[22] which saw this as symptomatic of the institutionalization of corruption in the country and leading to widespread distrust of political parties and the political class in general.[23] Press stories relating to corruption reached a peak under the conservative New Democracy government that followed PASOK in 1990–1993, featuring its own "mega-scandal", involving the AGET Heracles cement company, but also many scandals from PASOK era were unfolded in early 1990s.[22]
The legal case[8] in the European Court of Justice regarding the scandal became a reference point concerning how the member states settle violations of European law.[24] Specifically, the court decided that sanctions must be "effective, proportionate and dissuasive," with the European Community determining the minimum and maximum range of the crime penalties, while the member state must transpose the directive from the European Courts by deciding the specific maximum penalty for the crime in their respective jurisdictions.[24]
Notes
[edit]- ^
- ^ Nikolaos Athanasopoulos (1923-2015) was an MP with PASOK from 1977 to 1989, Finance minister from 1985 to 1989; then re-elected as a PASOK MP in 1993.[6]
- ^ a b c A total of 20,000 tons was identified: the original 9,000 tons imported by ship and the later discovered 11,000 tons brought in by train.
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Koutsoukis 2006, p. 131.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l San Simera.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Simons, New York Times 1989.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Mixani tou Xronou.
- ^ TVXS.
- ^ a b c d Efimerida ton Syntakton 2016.
- ^ The Daily Iowan 1989.
- ^ a b Commission v. Greece 1989.
- ^ Dobratz & Whitfield 1992, pp. 175–178.
- ^ Close 2014, p. 159.
- ^ a b c Bourne, The Athenian 1989, p. 15.
- ^ a b c d The Athenian 1990.
- ^ a b UPI Aug. 1989.
- ^ UPI Jul. 1989.
- ^ a b Diamandouros 1994.
- ^ Clogg 1994.
- ^ a b Los Angeles Times 1990.
- ^ UPI Aug. 1990.
- ^ Kathimerini Mar. 2003.
- ^ Koutsoukis 2003, p. 31.
- ^ a b Kathimerini May 2016.
- ^ a b Koutsoukis 2003, pp. 29–30.
- ^ Koutsoukis 2003, pp. 33–34.
- ^ a b Buisman 2022, pp. 184–185.
- ^ Parliament minutes.
Sources
[edit]- Legal case
- Commission v. Greece, 68/88 (European Court of Justice 21 September 1989).
- Books
- Close, David H. (2014). Greece since 1945: Politics, Economy and Society. London & New York: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781317880011.
- Koutsoukis, Kleomenis S. (2003). "Political corruption in Greece". In Bull, Martin J.; Newell, James L. (eds.). Corruption in Contemporary Politics. New York: Pulgrave Mcmillan. pp. 24–36. ISBN 978-1-4039-1999-1.
- Koutsoukis, Kleomenis S. (2006). "Political scandals and crisis management in Greece, 1821-2001". In Garrard, James; Newell, John (eds.). Scandals in past and contemporary politics. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 123–136. ISBN 9780719065514.
- Journals
- Buisman, S.S. (2022). "The Future of EU Substantive Criminal Law". European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice. 30 (2): 161–187. doi:10.1163/15718174-bja10032.
- Clogg, Richard (1994). "Greek-Bashing". London Review of Books. 16 (16).
- Diamandouros, Nikiforos P. (1994). "Cultural dualism and political change in post-authoritarian Greece" (PDF). Estudios/Working Papers (Centro de Estudios Avanzados en Ciencias Sociales) 50.
- Dobratz, Betty A.; Whitfield, Stefanie (1992). "Does Scandal Influence Voters' Party Preference? The Case of Greece during the Papandreou Era". European Sociological Review. 8 (2): 167–180. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a036630. JSTOR 522295.
- Newspapers & magazines
- Rigos, John (10 July 1989). "Greek Parliament OKs communist-conservative coalition". UPI.
- "Special court to hear Greek 'corn scandal'". UPI. 24 August 1989.
- "Special court chosen for Papandreou's trial" (PDF). The Daily Iowan. AP. 26 September 1989. p. 7A.
- Bourne, Jeanne (September 1989). "Hanging out the soiled linen: Hercules could divert two rivers to wash out the Augean stables, but the present government has only four 12-member committees and two more months to clean up the political scandals" (PDF). The Athenian. pp. 15–16.
- Simons, Marlise (19 November 1989). "Case of Seagoing Corruption Embarrasses Greece". The New York Times.
- Elliott, Sloane; Paris, Jenny (July 1990). "Corn scandal trial opens" (PDF). The Athenian. pp. 8–9.
- "Former Greek Socialist minister sentenced to prison". UPI. 11 August 1990.
- UPI (12 August 1990). "Ex-Greek Socialist Minister Sentenced". Los Angeles Times.
- Kapranos, Dimitris (4 March 2003). "Greece's tradition of spectacular trials". Kathimerini.
- "Πέθανε ο πρώην υπουργός και βουλευτής του ΠΑΣΟΚ Νίκος Αθανασόπουλος" [Former minister and PASOK MP Nikos Athanasopoulos has died]. Kathimerini (in Greek). 2 May 2016.
- "Πέθανε ο πρώην υπουργός του ΠΑΣΟΚ, Νικόλαος Αθανασόπουλος" [Former PASOK minister Nikolaos Athanasopoulos dies]. Efimerida ton Syntakton (in Greek). 2 May 2016.
- Web and other sources
- "Πρακτικά Βουλής" [Parliamentary minutes] (in Greek). Hellenic Parliament. 12 July 1989.
- "Το σκάνδαλο του γιουγκοσλαβικού καλαμποκιού" [The Yugoslav corn scandal] (in Greek). Σαν Σήμερα.
- ""Όταν εμείς χτίζαμε Παρθενώνες, εσείς τρώγατε βελανίδια". Ποιος υπουργός είπε την περίφημη ατάκα σε αξιωματούχο της ΕΟΚ που διερευνούσε το σκάνδαλο του καλαμποκιού" ["When we were building Parthenons, you were eating acorns." Which minister said the famous line to an EEC official investigating the corn scandal?] (in Greek). Μηχανή του Χρόνου.
- "Τα σκάνδαλα που ξεκίνησαν το μεγάλο φαγοπότι" [The scandals that initiated the big feast] (in Greek). TVXS. 11 August 2014.