In the condemnation of the announcement by Alexis Kouya against the president of SYRIZA, Stefanou Kasselakisthe government representative said, Pavlos Marinakisfrom the television station Megasaying characteristically that “I want to condemn an ​​unacceptable announcement against the official opposition leader, Stefanou Kasselakis. These are unthinkable to write and say.

Obviously, it has nothing to do with who the recipient of such a notice is. We must all stand against such rhetoric. Either we are in ND, or we are in SYRIZA. In this case, Mr. Kasselakis was a victim and we condemn it in its entirety.”

It is recalled that in his post on social media, the president of SYRIZA, on the occasion of the relevant report of Alexis Kouya for the Apostle Lytra, he pointed out:

“There is nothing “manly” about admitting the crime, as Mr. Kougias tried to convince us. There is nothing “manly” about abuse.’

The president of SYRIZA notes that “we cannot live in a society where gender-based violence is now a daily occurrence and the defenders of the abusers have a daily television presence”.

Alexis Kougias responded to Stefanos Kasselakis with a homophobic statement about the case of Apostolos Lytras.

“I read”, says Alexis Kougias, “that the president of SYRIZA, Stefanos Kasselakis, was placed on the Lytra case and on what is masculine behavior. I was shocked only because Stefanos Kasselakis, whose choices are known and who has not made it clear publicly, when he should, if in his marriage he is a woman or a man or Tyler, positions himself on what is masculine behavior.

The reaction of the president of SYRIZA was immediate, and he even asked for prosecutorial intervention.

“With my presence so far in our country, for one thing I can be 100% proud. That I am trying with all my strength to send the Kougies of this place to the time wardrobe of the Middle Ages. These attitudes drove my generation out of the country. And it’s time for my generation to rule and build our country”, Mr. Kasselakis characteristically emphasizes.

In fact, as he notes in a postscript, “the competent prosecutor knows what he has to do. With the conviction that Greek justice is not exhausted by letting abusers go free.”