Op de site van het Griekse parlement (Engelse tekst) staat:
"Loss of parliamentary office
There are many reasons why an MP may forfeit from office, such as decease, resignation, the termination of a parliamentary term, the annulment of their election by virtue of a Special Highest Court ruling and the forfeiture from parliamentary office. MPs forfeit from office when they no longer fulfill one or more of the requirements granting them the right to be elected, when an impediment or a parliamentary incompatibility arises, when there is proof of exceeding the maximum limit for electoral expenses or when there exists any other precondition of forfeiture as provided by art. 29 par. 2 of the Constitution. In either case, instances of forfeiture from office are ascertained by decisions of the Special Highest Court. Once an MP is disqualified, the seat goes to the next candidate, the second-best, of the same party who stood for elections in the same constituency (electoral district).
MPs represent the Nation and they vote according to conscience (articles 51 par. 2 and 60 par. 1 of the Constitution), meaning they are neither bound to act on the instructions of their electorate nor do they stand exclusively for the constituency where they were elected. They shall not be prosecuted or interrogated for a vote they cast or an opinion they express while performing their duties, with the exception of libel, and only after leave has been granted by Parliament (articles 61 par. 1 and 2 of the Constitution). MPs are granted ‘parliamentary immunity’, i.e. they can neither be prosecuted, unless they were caught in the act of committing a crime, nor be arrested or incarcerated while holding office without the Parliament’s consent (article 62 of the Constitution)."
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