A mistake in the PASOK President’s Posten Echoes by his accountant Nikos Androulakis was enough to cause a head-on confrontation with the government on the one hand and on the other hand to lead to new revelations about the now “famous” property which the PASOK President rents to the State, but also about the renovation that took place in it.
Until yesterday Nikos Androulakis denounced that the government and the Minister of Health, Adonis Georgiades, are organizing slander and smear against him, with the aim of his moral annihilation. He even countered the accusations of receiving millions and using state funds for renovations, noting that his income is taxed and that the money was given for the construction of a newly built building so that the Land Registry can function properly.
And while Harilaou Trikoupis and Nikos Androulakis are responding in very high tones to what the government is accusing them of and pointing the way to justice, PowerGame’s Big Mouth column is bringing out new revelations. So, as he writes, the government not only undertook the renovation of the Androulakis family’s property, but at the same time commissioned and paid the same family’s company to do some of the work.
Nikos Androulakis in his first reaction yesterday via a PASOK statement on the article about the family property they have rented from the Land Registry in Heraklion, denied that he took money from the state for the renovation of the property, saying that “he did not take a single euro from the state for renovation”.
The Big Mouth column, however, today refutes that claim, citing documents proving that the PASOK president’s family has a construction company that undertook some of the work done on the property.
Specifically presented is the decision of the Director of the Land Registry to “approve the payment of the amount of 2.435,40 euros, including VAT, to the company MARNI SA with VAT number 099462220 for the contracting of the services for the landscaping of the coastal entrance of the Land Registry of Heraklion, Crete” with protocol number 1110729 and dated 20 April 2011. “The company of the Androulakis family has been contracted by the State for the landscaping of the coastal entrance of the property that the Androulakis family had leased to the State,” the column notes, explaining that this was done for a sum of 2,435.40 euros, including VAT.
The column reports: “This is because this particular phrase is solemnly contradicted by Diavgeia, which tells us that not only did the State (correctly, correctly) undertake the renovation of the Androulakis family’s property, but at the same time commissioned the Androulakis family’s company to do (without compensation) part of the work. In simple terms, the Androulakis family was paid to do work which, at the end of the lease, will be ‘left to them’ as an upgrade of the property’. Big Mouth adds, “Nor am I claiming that there is any collusion behind all of this. However, either way, PASOK’s claim yesterday that President Androulakis did not get a single euro for the renovation has been contradicted by the facts.”
The new revelation was pointed out to X by Adonis Georgiades who vehemently attacked Nikos Androulakis yesterday after the revelations about the family property in Heraklion.
“The truly demonic reporter @KourtakisJohn (and I don’t say that ironically but literally) has again found something that looks like it might be of interest to @androulakisnick’s property. Read from today’s @PowergameGr,” Adonis Georgiades says, referring to the column.
A new error in Androulakis’ Poteni Hashes
Specifically, it reveals that Nikos Androulakis appears as a shareholder with a 2% stake in the company MANI SA. A company, however, whose name is not correct, as its real name is MAR.NI SA. As the column reveals, the company has been counting since 1999, has a capital of 1,512,052.50 euros and has multiple activities ranging from trading in potatoes, meat and fish to “construction, maintenance and contracting of private and public works”. This company was paid for the landscaping of the entrance to the Androulakis family’s building in Heraklion that houses the local Land Registry.
Source: iefimerida.gr