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Greek police arrest 20 in Crete over suspected EU farm subsidies fraud

Greek police arrest 20 in Crete over suspected EU farm subsidies fraud

ReutersMon, May 25, 2026 at 9:30 AM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: Police protects the Ministry of Rural Development and Food, during farmers’ protest over delays to EU subsidies due to farm fraud scandal, in Athens, Greece, November 11, 2025. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki/File Photo

ATHENS, May 25 (Reuters) - Greek police arrested 20 people on the island of Crete on Monday, saying they had dismantled ‌a criminal gang suspected of defrauding the European Union of ‌agricultural subsidies - the latest case in a growing scandal that has shaken the government.

Among ​the group's suspected leaders were two accountants and state employees who assisted farmers with submitting applications to receive EU farm funds based on false declarations of farm land, police officials said.

Since starting to operate in ‌2019, the network's illegal ⁠revenue topped €3 million ($3.49 million), police said in a statement.

Monday's arrests are the latest in a series of local ⁠cases linked to a wider probe by the European Public Prosecutor's Office - an independent EU office - into alleged crimes in Greece against the bloc's ​financial interests.

Last ​year, European prosecutors charged dozens ​of Greek stock-breeders with faking ‌ownership of grazing land to claim millions of euros in EU subsidies, with the alleged help of state employees and conservative politicians.

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The scandal has made political waves in Greece, prompting parliamentary probes - which were inconclusive - as well as ministers' resignations and calls for early elections by ‌opposition parties.

At the request of the ​European chief prosecutor, parliament voted in April ​to lift the parliamentary immunity ​of 13 lawmakers from the ruling New Democracy ‌party, so they can be investigated ​over their suspected ​role in separate cases.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis urged EU prosecutors to decide swiftly whether to indict the lawmakers, as he seeks ​to stem the political ‌fallout from the probe before the next parliamentary election due ​by spring 2027.

($1 = 0.8589 euros)

(Reporting by Yannis Souliotis; Writing ​by Renee Maltezou;Editing by Helen Popper)

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