Tuesday, November 9, 2010
ATHENS |
Tue Nov 9, 2010 6:09am EST
ATHENS (Reuters) - A suspicious package found at the Hungarian embassy in Athens on Tuesday contained no explosives, Greek police said.
Greek authorities have blamed leftist militants for a wave of parcel bombs sent to foreign governments and embassies in Athens last week, but the latest incident was a false alarm.One official said police had planned to detonate the Hungarian embassy package, a large envelope, but decided not to after a thermal camera detected no explosive device."In the end, the parcel contained only documents. It was a false alarm," the police official said.Police, who had earlier cordoned off and evacuated the eight-storey building in central Athens where the embassy is located, said that employees were returning to their jobs.Last week, a parcel with explosives was intercepted at the German chancellor's office and another addressed to Italy's prime minister caught fire when it was checked. Police also intercepted a booby-trapped parcel addressed to French President Nicolas Sarkozy.Greek police said the parcels did not contain enough explosives to harm any recipient seriously.(Reporting b!
y Renee Maltezou and Angeliki Koutantou; Writing by Ingrid Melander)
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