Zganjer said this in a comment on claims by presidential candidate Slaven Letica who told reporters on Thursday that Chief State Prosecutor Mladen Bajic should "investigate why two cars from the Office of the President were involved in the abduction".
Letica said that according to his sources, a former advisor to the president, Zeljko Bagic, was banned from entering the EU because of his involvement in the kidnapping and not because of his alleged connections with General Ante Gotovina, who is wanted by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague.
The Interior Ministry issued a statement on Thursday evening saying it had no information nor had it received any request from the Office of the State Prosecutor to investigate allegations about the involvement of cars from the President's Office in the abduction of Zagorec's son.
General Zagorec's son was abducted on 23 February this year and the kidnappers demanded from his father a ransom of 1.5 million euros. Zagorec paid a half of the sum, and after the kidnappers realised that the police might trace them, they freed the boy.