After four months in a Greek jail facing spying charges, two Czech computer
games developers are set to return home very soon. The pair, who were
arrested for taking photos of a military facility on the island of Lemnos,
have been freed on bail in the wake of a fresh ruling from the Athens
authorities stating that they do not represent a security threat.
Martin Pezlar, 28, and Ivan Buchta, 33, are developers for a Prague-based
computer games maker named Bohemia Interactive. While on holiday in
September on the island of Lemnos, located near the Greek-Turkish border,
they took photos of a local army base – they say with a view to using
the
pictures in connection with a new project.
The two were subsequently arrested on charges of espionage that could have
carried sentences of 20 years behind bars. However, they have just been
released on bail of EUR 5,000 each, following lobbying from the Czech
president,
prime minister and foreign minister. Indeed, Greece’s prime minister,
Antonis Samaras, personally informed his Czech counterpart, Petr Nečas,
about the decision on Tuesday.
The Czech consul in Athens, Blanka Kovácsová – who visited the pair
last week – outlines the turning point in the case.
“The commission that decided on their charges decided that their
activities did not threaten the security of the Greek state. On that
basis,
agreement to bail was granted. But that doesn’t mean that the trial will
not take place. It will take place within 18 months of their arrest, or it
should.”
But perhaps it will not. Pezlar and Buchta’s Czech lawyer, Dagmar
Raupachová, is optimistic her clients will not actually be tried for
spying.
“The situation regarding the evidence in the case file does not
support
the possibility of the crime of espionage being proven. I read between the
lines of yesterday’s decision that there will be a change of legal
qualification.”
That is likely to mean that the charge of spying will be replaced with one
of taking photographs without a permit. That normally carries a fine in
Greece, so in view of the fact the games developers have already spent
several months in prison, they may well face no further punishment.
Buchta and Pezlar have received support from people in the Czech Republic
and in the international gaming industry. Their fathers travelled to
Greece
to visit them in
detention, while they have been allowed to phone home.
Buchta’s mother Hana said she was overjoyed at Tuesday’s news.
“It’s wonderful, of course, wonderful. We’ve been waiting for
this
news for over four months, so we’re incredibly happy. I’m hugely
relieved but the ultimate relief won’t come until I see him and hug him
at the airport.”
The pair are due to return to the Czech Republic on Thursday.
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