Articles 61 and 62 of the Constitution set out the legal responsibilities and immunity from prosecution of Members of Parliament. Article 83 of the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament sets out the procedure to be followed for Parliament to grant permission for the immunity of an MP to be lifted so that a prosecution can be subsequently pursued. Circular 4/2012 from the Prosecutor’s Office of the Supreme Court specifies, “Any investigative act necessary to verify a crime is permitted, except for those acts that affect the person of the MP (e.g. they may not be called in for questioning).”
In November 2021, SYRIZA MP Pavlos Polakis, announced that he had been summoned for questioning by investigators from the ‘Department for the Protection of the State and the Democratic Regime’ following a lawsuit filed against him. However, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution and the law, the permission of Parliament should have been sought prior to summoning the MP. For this reason, a report was sent to the Speaker of Parliament and the Prosecutor of the Supreme Court, so that the necessary steps could be taken to revoke the unlawful and unconstitutional summons and to preserve the constitutional order. Subsequently, the Prosecutor’s Office announced that the summons had been issued in error and had been withdrawn.
However, as SYRIZA stated in a later announcement, the ‘erroneous’ violation of a fundamental provision of the Constitution raises deep concerns and questions. Pavlos Polakis has sent a report to the Prosecutor of the Supreme Court calling on them to investigate and resolve the issue (see 1 and 2). According to reports in the press, the Prosecutor of the Supreme Court has requested copies of documents relating to the case from the Prosecutor’s Office.
Judicial and prosecutorial authorities must be aware of and apply the Constitution and the law. The questioning and prosecution of MPs for criminal offenses during their parliamentary term is governed by specific rules which are laid out in the Constitution and the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament.
In this context, certain actions by the judicial and prosecutorial authorities require the permission of the Parliament beforehand. In this case, however, a Member of Parliament was summoned for questioning in the context of a criminal case, without the necessary procedure being followed beforehand. Despite the fact that this summons was subsequently withdrawn, concerns and questions remain, as the incident called into question the fundamental rules of democracy.
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