A large car bomb exploded outside a Bank of Greece branch this morning in central Athens. Whilst damage was caused to the building there were no injuries. No claim of responsibility has yet been made.
As the Greek government prepares to re-enter the financial markets on Thursday a bomb exploded in central Athens in the early morning. Security forces have closed off the area but photos show significant damage to the exterior of the building with the façade and windows broken.
The Amerakis street branch of the Bank of Greece sits in the very centre of Athens just a few hundred metres from the Greek parliament building. Due to the timing of the attack and warning calls the police were easily able to evacuate the area and no injuries have been reported. The blast occurred around 6am roughly 45 minutes after warning calls had been placed. The bomb consisted of 70kg of explosives placed inside a stolen car which was parked outside the bank. On the same street as the bank are offices of the privatisation agency and the representative of the Troika.
There have been several armed attacks in Greece in recent months which has led to security being visibly tighter around central Athens. Today's attack comes as the Greek government attempts to make a much publicised return to the bond markets and German Chancellor Angela Merkel visits on Friday. The Greek state is claiming this return after several years of exclusion from the market marks the end of the crisis. A lot of words and expense(repairing riot damage and clearing graffiti) have gone into trying to create an atmosphere of normality in Greece as the crisis continues and the current government weakens. Such attacks as the one this morning puncture this atmosphere of normality.
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This is the FT's version of
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