The sending of promotional e-mails by Anna Michel Asimakopoulou to expatriate Greeks for the elections is developing into a major issue of the electoral process.
Many accuse her of taking the voter lists along with their personal data from the interior ministry in violation of legislation that allows the delivery of voter lists to parties and candidates but has an exception for personal data.
Read about it: Anger of expatriates against Asimakopoulou: “Where did you find our e-mails?”
MeRA25 for Asimakopoulou: Faster even than the staff state
Othon Iliopoulos on emigrants’ complaints: “ND again violates the institution of personal data”
On X (twitter), named and anonymous people erupt against the ND MEP, they invoke the law and there are expatriates who threaten lawsuits, not in Greek courts, but in their countries of residence because “here the systems work.” Some featured posts:
Which is more than illegal, according to the Data Protection Authority: https://t.co/VIQYUEVHho
Because it seems that it is not illegal for parties to receive copies of electoral rolls.
But here Ms. Asimakopoulou says something else, which is false! pic.twitter.com/GAbJBdkX0f— Theodore Lytras (@TheodoreLytras) March 1, 2024
@TheodoreLytras e-mails and telephone numbers are NOT given in copies of foreign electoral rolls. The law is clear. There will be many lawsuits. And not in Greek courts. In the countries where we live, because here the systems work! pic.twitter.com/99rHjX0geJ
— Sakis Mitsotakis (@SMitsotakis) March 1, 2024
I don’t like to sow discord, but think of the faces of the rest of the ND MEPs when they found out that the interior ministry pushed the list on Asimakopoulou, but not on them.
— nastazia rev (@nastaziarev) March 1, 2024
Postal voting is a necessary possibility that should have been given to expatriates.
It is also a given that Asimakopoulou is a number and those of the ND govern with arrogance without respect for institutions and laws
The problem is not the staff vote, but the numbers
— nyrros🐦 (@Nyrros) March 1, 2024
Mrs. Asimakopoulou seems to be obsessed with a “political culture” that makes her think that the personal data of citizens held by the state can be used for her own voter-hunting benefit. Reformers from Lidl!
Full forfeit🧐— Nikos Michailidis (@NikosMichailid4) March 1, 2024
I did not receive an email from Ms. Asimakopoulou.
At first I was upset that he forgot me, but then I remembered that in 2019 I voted in Greece, so my name (and my email, of course) is not in the statuses.
— Nikos Sarantakos (@nikosarantakos) March 1, 2024
Copy-Paste that I wrote you on FB
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Dear Ms. Anna Michelle Asimakopoulou – Anna Michelle Asimakopoulou, I OFFICIALLY invite you to answer, when did I give you permission to contact me and when did I voluntarily supply you with…— Antony Petsas (@apetsas) March 1, 2024
Shame Mr. Asimakopoulos. I know that I have never given you my specific email except to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. There was also no way for you to know that I am a Greek abroad, you in particular. Just a shame.
— Stefanos Tsakiris (@TsakirisCNN) March 1, 2024
The leakage of personal data that took place today from the lists of the Ministry of the Interior with emigrants’ emails can also be seen from the time when Anna-Michel Asimakopoulou sent her promotional message #Apodimoi #AnnaMichelleMEP #PsifizomeEpistoliki #European elections pic.twitter.com/pBEAA1GqBp
— Turms (@turmsi) March 1, 2024
#Storm #social #media #Asimakopoulou #accused #personal #data #Ministry #Internal #Affairs