Suspended Paphos mayor Phedonas Phedonos spent two hours taking questions from the police on Wednesday evening as investigations into allegations made against him regarding an alleged rape continue.

Various local media outlets reported that Phedonos submitted a three-page written statement to the police, and that he offered no answers to the police outside of that written statement.

It was also reported that “about 20 people” have already testified to the police in the case, including the alleged victim and people from “his environment”, while the police are also reportedly going ahead with an investigation into allegations of domestic abuse levelled against him.

Allegations of rape against Phedonos resurfaced earlier this month, when Paphos-based land developer Theodoros Aristodemou, of Aristo Developers, accused him of committing the crime around ten years ago, before giving a statement to the police.

The domestic abuse allegations, meanwhile, surfaced after social media personality Ioanna Photiou, better known by her alias Annie Alexui, claimed to hold documents from the related to admissions of Phedonos’ wife Louiza Andreou to the Nicosia general hospital in 2017, which stated that she had been “beaten” by Phedonos.

Andreou has vehemently denied all accusations made against her husband, writing in a post on social media that “my family is being subjected to a coordinated attack”.

“Everyone who really knows me, in my workplace, in our extended family, our friends, know that I am not a victim and that I have no fear. I have lived harmoniously with my husband for 20 years. I assure you that he is a wonderful man, decent and honest, and I am truly proud of him and the battles he is fighting,” she wrote.

The government appears keen to take Photiou’s accusations seriously, however, with Justice Minister Costas Fitiris having extended an olive branch in her direction, saying that there are “ways to get around” the arrest warrants put out in her name, so as to allow her to make a statement.

Photiou is currently in self-imposed exile in Russia, but Fitiris suggested that a team from the Republic of Cyprus could travel to Russia to take a statement from her, or that Photiou could make a statement through “a lawyer in Cyprus whom she trusts”.