Stressing that Tomasic and her family continued to be under pressure from the drug lords and that her security depended on the good work of the police, Djapic said at a press conference in Zagreb that such exposure of parliamentarians was "unthinkable" in other democratic countries.
Djapic said that if the HSP were to run the Ministry of the Interior after the forthcoming parliamentary election it would crack down on drug trafficking and drug abuse, because 10 per cent of the population was affected by that problem.
Djapic said that there was a lack of political will to resolve the problem, stressing that between three billion and five billion kuna of drug money was being laundered and that the money "is infiltrated deep in many pores of Croatian society."
Asked to comment on the departure of Vladimir Faber from the post of chief of police in the eastern city of Osijek to assume an advisory role in the Ministry of the Interior, Djapic, who is also the Mayor of Osijek, said that "it's good both for Faber and for Osijek," noting that his impression was that it was "a reward for a job well done."
Djapic congratulated Darinko Mikulic on being appointed new chief of police in Osijek, expressing hope that they would have good cooperation.