An explosion ripped through the United States embassy compound in central Athens on Friday but no one was hurt, a US embassy spokesperson said.
Greek anti-terrorist officers were on the scene and investigating. It was not clear what caused the blast.
”There are no injuries from the blast. The investigation of the cause is continuing,” the US embassy spokesperson said.
”We are investigating the cause of the explosion. We are not ruling anything out,” a senior police official told Reuters.
Dozens of police cars surrounded the embassy and police cordoned off all roads in the area, including a major boulevard in front of the mission.
”Police have cut off all traffic. I am standing right here but there does not seem to be any damage. Greece’s anti-terror squad are now investigating inside the embassy,” a US embassy employee at the scene told Reuters.
The senior police official did not say whether the explosion was set off inside the compound or whether something might have been thrown into the embassy grounds.
Police officials at the scene said that whatever caused the explosion damaged the official embassy sign outside the mission, but there was little other indication of the extent of damage inside.
The tightly guarded building is surrounded by a three-metre-high steel fence. Guards are posted at every entrance and at street corners around it.
Embassy officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Local residents called in to state television saying they had felt the explosion, which shattered some windows.
Greece’s biggest domestic security threat, the leftist November 17 guerrilla group, which had in the past killed US and other foreign diplomats in Greece, was dismantled in 2002.
In November last year, Greek riot police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators marching to the US embassy in Athens who chanted slogans including ”Bush the butcher, out of Iraq” and ”The USA is the real terrorist”.
In February 1996, unidentified assailants fired a rocket at the US embassy compound in Athens, causing minor damage to three diplomatic vehicles and some surrounding buildings. – Reuters