The revolutionary class struggle affirms the attacks against the rail operator and a ministry dedicated to ‘the Palestinian people’.
The Greek police say that they are investigating the claims of an unknown hard line group that he was responsible for a couple of explosions of bombs that shook Athens during the past year.
A police spokeswoman told the Greek media on Monday that the authorities were examining a statement issued by the revolutionary class struggle that was behind an explosion on Friday near the offices of the Hellenic Train rail operator last week.
The group published a statement on the Athens.indymedia.org website on Sunday, which dedicated both attacks to “the Palestinian people and their heroic resistance.”
“The claim is being examined with great attention by the relevant officers so they can collect information,” said Constantine Police spokeswoman Dimoglidou to Action 24 TV.
She said it was too early to draw conclusions about the identity of the group, but the police were investigating possible links with other cases in the past.
The revolutionary classes declaration blamed Hellenic Train, a Ferrovie Unit dello Stato of Italy, for a railway accident in 2023 near the Greek village of Tempi.
The accident, which killed 57 people, has led to numerous protests on deficiencies in the rail system and government corruption claims.
The group’s statement described the demonstrations against the “state capitalist crime”, and tried to link them with Palestine and the war in Gaza “since they touch in a country with an active role in the American-Sionist genocidal war.”
The statement also said that the group was behind a 2024 attack against the Ministry of Labor. Neinder’s attack resulted in any injury, since the warnings were sent in advance.
Hellenic Train, the passenger and load trains service operator, once was a subsidiary of the Helenic Railways of state property.
In February, the Air Accident and Railway Research Authority of Greece (Harsia) said that the 2023 accident was due to chronic safety gaps and that they still needed a repetition to be addressed.
Christos Papadimitriou, head of Harsia, resigned on Wednesday, is expected to stop the efforts to shed light on the worst rail disaster in the country.
A judicial investigation is expected to conclude this year.