"The report is not yet completed, and we are going to investigate also all other cases," PM Sanader said in Vienna on Sunday evening where he was attending the conference called "Croatia - Austria - Europe".
Asked by reporters whether his country was entering a period which might resemble a police state, Sanader said that this was out of question, and Croatia was not entering any undemocratic era.
In the case of the POA and a reporter, Helena Pujiz (who was interrogated by POA agents), no law was violated and it was established by everybody, he reiterated.
Asked to comment on speculation that a vast majority of the Croatian government was insisting on the dismissal of the current POA head, Josko Podbevsek, Sanader said that "according to our surveys, it is not true that 90 percent of Croatian citizens are expecting it (Podbevsek's dismissal)".
During the Vienna conference, Austria expressed support to the start of Croatia's entry talks with the European Union. On that occasion PM Sanader said that Croatia was capable of conducting the two processes in parallel: one referring to efforts to become an EU full member, the other to helping the international community in a bid to achieve a lasting peace and stabilisation of south-eastern Europe.