not sure if there is anyone left here but I am posting this since we talked about it briefly if my memory serves me right...
  Greek Police Catch Suspected Nov 17 Guerrilla Boss                                     Wed Jul 17, 7:07 PM ET
                                      By Maria Petrakis 
                                      ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek police Wednesday detained a 60-year-old man who                                     they suspect may be a leader and possibly even a founder of the country's                                     most wanted urban guerrilla group, November 17, a police source said. 
                                       In what Greek media were reporting as an "historic day," the source told                                     Reuters the man had been seized by an anti-terrorism squad who landed by                                     helicopter on the island of Lipsi, 160 miles east of Athens, where he has a                                     holiday home. 
                                      The source said he was being questioned at Athens police headquarters and                                     documents, a typewriter and a computer had been seized from his main home                                     in the capital. 
                                      Earlier Wednesday police said ballistic tests had linked a gun used by                                     November 17 to the murders of seven people including a British military attache                                     and a Greek politician. 
                                      Named after the date of a bloody student uprising in 1973 during Greece's                                     1967-74 military rule, the radical leftist group has killed 23 people since 1975,                                     starting with the murder of Richard Welch, head of the American CIA ( news -                                     web sites)'s Athens bureau. 
                                      But until the past few weeks, police had failed to identify, let alone arrest, a                                     single member of a group that ranked with Germany's Baader-Meinhof gang and                                     the Italian Red Brigades. 
                                      HELICOPTER RAID 
                                      Witnesses on the isolated Lipsi island, with only 600 inhabitants, told Greek                                     television stations that the anti-terrorism squad of six had landed in a fire                                     department helicopter so as not to tip off the suspect. 
                                      They said they believed the suspect was a university professor with a French                                     wife, and that police had taken him into custody because they feared he was                                     about to take evidence off the island. 
                                      Since the manhunt for November 17 gripped Greece at the end of June, there                                     has been almost unanimous agreement in the media that its founder was a                                     Greek student radical in the 1960s who studied in Paris and received                                     revolutionary training in Cuba. 
                                      Hopes already were sky-high that the group's demise was near before the                                     suspect was taken into custody. 
                                      An earlier police statement said they had positively linked a .45 pistol                                     discovered in a central Athens hideout to the shooting of British military attache                                     Stephen Saunders and parliamentarian Pavlos Bakoyiannis, son-in-law of a                                     former Greek prime minister. 
                                      The hideouts also contained dozens of anti-tank rockets, remote-controlled                                     bombs and disguises such as fake police uniforms. 
                                      BOTCHED BOMBING 
                                      Police were led to the weapons cache after suspected November 17 member                                     Savvas Xiros was injured in a botched bombing at a Greek shipping company at                                     the end of June. 
                                      Xiros, 40, an icon painter and son of a Greek Orthodox priest, is being                                     questioned by authorities. 
                                      The police statement said three other people, including two of Xiros's brothers,                                     were also being questioned about their links to the group. 
                                      Saunders, the group's last victim, was killed in central Athens while driving to                                     work on June 8, 2000 when two men on a motorcycle came alongside his car                                     and shot him through the windows. 
                                      In a declaration, November 17 wrote that he had been targeted for his alleged                                     participation in the orchestration of NATO ( news - web sites)'s bombing of                                     Yugoslavia during the Kosovo conflict, a claim denied by his family. 
                                      Saunders's murder set off an outcry in Britain and led to British police joining                                     the investigation along with FBI ( news - web sites) agents already working on                                     the case. 
                                      With the Athens 2004 Olympics looming, Greek authorities have thrown all their                                     efforts into tracking down the group. 
                                      "All these incidents of the last 27 years...will be solved and they will be fully                                     solved," Greek government spokesman Christos Protopapas told reporters                                     Wednesday. 
                                      November 17 has also been linked to the murder of Greek police and                                     industrialists, attacks on Turkish diplomats, a rocket attack on the German                                     ambassador's residence, and bank robberies to finance its operations. |