The mother of a Greek politician has been killed in an arson attack on her home in Athens, an act that has drawn swift condemnation from Westminster. The victim, named locally as Eleni Papadopoulos, 74, was the mother of opposition MP Dimitris Papadopoulos. Firefighters found her body in the charred remains of her apartment early this morning. Police say the blaze was started deliberately, with accelerants found at the scene. No group has claimed responsibility, but sources close to the investigation say the attack is believed to be politically motivated.
The Foreign Office issued a statement this afternoon calling the killing “a cowardly act of political violence that has no place in any democracy”. The Prime Minister echoed those sentiments in a direct message to his Greek counterpart, offering support and urging a swift investigation. For a nation that has seen its share of political turmoil, the murder of an elderly woman sends a chilling signal about the fraying edges of civic discourse.
Dimitris Papadopoulos is a vocal critic of Greece’s far-right Golden Dawn party and has been a target of online abuse for months. His mother’s death is the latest in a string of attacks on politicians’ families across Europe. In France, a local councillor’s home was firebombed last month. In Germany, a mayor was beaten outside her office. The violence is not confined to the continent. The UK has seen its own share of aggression directed at MPs: the murder of Sir David Amess in 2021 remains a scar on the national consciousness.
But this feels different. This is not a lone wolf or a deranged individual. This appears to be a calculated attack on a family member. It is a tactic straight out of the playbook of organised extremists. The Greek government has promised to hunt down those responsible. But promises ring hollow for a grieving son and a terrified public.
For ordinary people in Athens and beyond, this death is a reminder that political hatred does not stay in the debating chamber. It seeps into homes, into families. It turns neighbours against neighbours. Eleni Papadopoulos was not a public figure. She was a mother, a grandmother, a woman who made moussaka for her son’s colleagues. Now she is a symbol of how low our politics can sink.
The Labour Party in the UK has added its voice to the chorus of condemnation, with the shadow foreign secretary calling for an urgent review of security for politicians and their families. The Liberal Democrats went further, demanding that the government convene a cross-party summit on political violence. The time for platitudes is over. The time for action is now.
As the sun set over Athens tonight, a crowd gathered outside Parliament Square. They held candles and photographs of Eleni. They chanted for justice and for an end to the hatred that killed her. But the flames that took her life cannot be extinguished by words alone. They demand accountability. They demand change.
This is a story of one family’s tragedy. But it is also a warning. If we do not turn back the tide of political violence, more mothers, more fathers, more children will be caught in the flames. The UK has condemned this attack. But condemnation without action is hollow. Westminster must lead by example. It must protect not just the politicians, but the families who stand behind them.








