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Police search for missing terrorists and rockets

The “Group of People's Fighters” undertook responsibility for the attack on the German ambassadorial residence, on 30 December, through a proclamation sent to newspaper “Pontiki."

The 20 page document was found after a phone call to the newspaper tipped off staff to look for the documents in a purple bag behind a specific telephony hub in the Exarcheia neighborhood of Athens.

In their proclamation, the group of rebels refer to the “occupational government of Tsolakoglou [the Greek Quisling],” to a “revolutionary project” and “total rupture.” Meanwhile, they express their fear for the euro being used as a “screening tool” and the fact that it appears to be a“Trojan Horse” of German Imperialism in Europe. The proclamation also speaks of a “war against the war declared by the elites.

Interestingly enough the proclamation also mentions the suicide of Dimitris Christoulas at Syntagma Square in December 2012, calling it a political act, and the final cry of a society that is subsisting.

What is raising more concerns at police headquarters is the fact that the document mentions a rocket attack against the Mercedes dealership in Varybobi, an attack no one was aware of. Late on Thuesday evening, police located a crater, believed to have been caused by a rocket, but no remains of the projectile.

Meanwhile, The Greek Police are trying to track down anarchist Kostas Sakkas, whose trail has been lost since last Monday when he failed to report to the local police station in Kaminia, Piraeus. Sakkas is facing charges as a member of terrorist group “Conspiracy of the Nuclei of Fire.”

Sakkas had been incarcerated until January when he was released on a bail of 5,000 euros. He was also obliged to report to the closest police station in his region every Monday and to stop fraternizing with any known member of the terrorist group or anyone who is suspected of being involved in it.

Now, police fear that Sakkas maybe trying to team up with other fugitive terrorists like Christodoulos Xiros, or Nikos Maziotis, for a deadly strike.