PASOK Parliamentary Representative Pavlos Christidis attended the monument to Paul Fyssa in Keratsini and made a statement from the scene of “Killa P” on September 18, 2013:

Twelve years later, Paul Fyssa’s voice continues to resonate within us. Not only as a protest song, but as a constant reminder that fascism does not fall from heaven, it is rooted in silence, feeds on fear and reaps when we are complacent.
Paul’s murder was not a “isolated incident”. It was the outburst of a threat that was lurking and continues to linger, in the words of hatred, in violence against the different, in the cracks of our democratic state.
For us, memory is not a ritual. It’s a call. It’s a commitment.
Every young and young in this country is worth growing in a Greece that does not tolerate darkness, which is not compatible with violence, which does not forget.
Democracy is not a given. It is a daily act and collective responsibility. They are the citizens who stand up. Institutions that do not silence. The society that unites its voices towards hatred.
Our generation has a duty to keep Paul’s legacy alive. To raise a barrier to any form of fascism and to open the ways of freedom, justice, equality.
In order not to see children again lost for their ideas.
To never need to say “it was too late” again.
For a society that is not afraid.
For a democracy that does not bend.
For Paul. For all of us.