Spain continues vendetta against ETA in Cuba, Venezuela and N. Ireland
Patrick J. O'DonoghueSpain refuses to let go of laptop accusations against the Basque ETA armed group and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and alleged Venezuelan connivance and collaboration.
What is clearly emerging is that Spain wants Venezuela and Cuba to hand over ETA members residing in their countries.
Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos has announced that the writ against ETA and FARC members allegedly plotting to kill Colombian presidents in Spain has been sent to Cuba and Venezuela via the Spanish ambassadors, who have been given the task of ensuring the collaboration of both countries in hunting down ETA.
In Cuba the main target is Jose Angel Urtiaga Martinez whom 15-minutes-of-fame Spanish Judge Velasco claims is ETA's representative to the FARC. Another is alleged second in command, Jose Miguel Arrugaeta San Emeterio. Both men are charged with relaying explosives training.
Moratinos has declared that the Spanish executive is acting in full cooperation with the autonomous legislative power and Congress. All three institutions have clubbed together on this one.
Yesterday, Moratinos took off his government's mask, saying Chavez has "collaborated in extraditions and has demonstrated his disposition to accompany the Spanish government's efforts to eradicate, combat and defeat ETA."
Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere affairs, Chilean-born Arturo Valenzuela has tuned into the Spanish-Colombian campaign against Venezuela and rebel organizations, declaring that Venezuela has given "some assistance" to the FARC who are receiving specific types of help from different groups.
Spain, Colombia and the USA will be attending the inauguration of right-wing crusader, Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, who has made a great fuss inviting Venezuelan opposition leader, Antonio Ledezma to the event.
President Chavez said he will not be attending the inauguration but his name will be top of the agenda in corridor meetings.
Update: a "Don't Extradite the Basques" campaign has been set up in Northern Ireland against the British government's decision to allow the extradition of former ETA prisoner and hunger-striker, Inaki de Juana, who has been living in the North for the last two years.
The Sinn Fein party is organizing the campaign and the party's euro-deputy, Bairbre de Brun said Inaki was being pursued for his political ideas and extradition to Spain should be dropped.
De Brun argued that both the British and Spanish governments are ignoring important political initiatives in the Basque Country to resolve the conflict.
De Juana spent 21 years in a Spanish jail, of which 17 years were in solitary confinement.
Last year an ad hoc committee in Venezuela succeeded in stopping the extradition of another ETA member.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Madrid Exports Political Persecution
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Segi Representatives in Ireland
Segi activist speaks out against repression
Emma ClancyRepresentatives from the Basque pro-independence youth organisation Segi visited Belfast from 13-15 November to participate in the Ógra Shinn Féin National Congress.
One of the Segi representatives spoke to An Phoblacht about the criminalisation of the pro-independence movement by the Spanish government; the recent Batasuna call for a democratic resolution to the Basque conflict, and the need to build solidarity between the Basque and Irish movements for independence. (As Segi has been banned by the Spanish government, the representative will remain anonymous.)
“As Ógra Shinn Féin celebrates 100 years of the Irish republican youth movement since the foundation of Na Fianna Éireann, we in Segi are celebrating 30 years since the formation of our predecessor organisation Jarrai,” the Segi representative told An Phoblacht.
“Segi is a revolutionary socialist, feminist, pro-independence youth organisation. We organise young people across the Basque Country in struggles for their rights – for national rights and language and cultural rights, but also to improve their living conditions, housing, and their rights in the workplace or on campus.
“But while we celebrate three decades of struggle for Basque independence and socialism, our movement is coming under increasing repression.”
Segi (formerly Haika) was declared illegal in 2005 by the Audiencia Nacional (National Court, a Diplock-style political court in Madrid).
The court ruled that, while it was an “unauthorised” organisation, it could not be considered “terrorist” because it had no connection to political violence. But in 2007 the Spanish Supreme Court revised the ruling – despite there being no new evidence – and declared Jarrai-Haika-Segi to be a terrorist organisation.
“Now more than 100 of our comrades are in prison,” the Segi woman said.
“Now you can be jailed for eight years simply for membership of our organisation.
“The repression by the Spanish state against the youth movement is not only arrests and imprisonment, although these are its most obvious forms. The criminalisation goes much deeper and broader; it is structural.
“There are continual attacks against youth centres, youth demonstrations and gatherings. They are targeting not just pro-independence activists, but all community activists who provide leadership to strengthen their communities.”
The representative said that this year judgements have begun being handed down by the Spanish courts against Segi activists.
“Many have been held in ‘pre-trial detention’ since 2005 – four years being the maximum amount of time a person can be jailed before trial under Spanish law. The average sentence most young activists are receiving for their political activism is six years in jail,” she said.
“You can see the impact of the criminalisation campaign here in Belfast where Basque youth activist Arturo Beñat Villanueva is fighting extradition to Spain charged with membership of the youth movement.
“Each time a Basque political activist is arrested, the police come in the early hours of the morning and hold the person in incommunicado detention for five days, during which they are interrogated and often tortured.
“In many cases, police have forced the prisoners to sign statements saying they are members of a banned organisation, and judges will use these statements to convict the prisoners, even if is the only ‘proof’ offered by the prosecution.”
The activist said Segi “reaffirms its full support” for the proposal by Batasuna for a democratic resolution to the Basque conflict through a process in which the Basque people’s rights are recognised.
Continues...
As always, we want to thank the solidarity of our Irish friends and their commitment to the defense of the Basque people's human and political rights.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Benat Won't Be Extradited
Ógra Shinn Fein welcomes Belfast court decisionÓgra Shinn Féin have welcomed a Belfast court decision which has thrown out a case against Belfast based Basque Arturo Villanueva Arteaga (Benat) seeking his extradition.
The Spanish was seeking Benat due to his alleged membership of pro independence Basque youth group, Jarrai. The judge said that there was lack of specific details about attendance at meetings, interviews or other evidence that Mr Arteaga was in Jarrai.
Jarrai were deemed ‘illegal’ by the Spanish Supreme court in 2005 and deemed ‘terrorist‘ in 2007, as was the current pro independence youth movement, Segi.
Although the warrant claimed the wanted man carried out violent and coercive actions from 1994 to 2000, Judge Burgess held there was no reference to dates, locations or targets of any alleged attacks which would allow anyone to link them to him.
The warrant claimed that Benat had been a member of Jarrai in 2000, yet it wasn’t until 2005 that it was deemed ‘illegal’.
Explaining his case, Benat said that he had always worked "politically, peacefully and publicly" in defence of Basque rights, and he criticised the way the Spanish dealt with these kind of political cases, which is not the right way and breach any kind of principles.
"Not just myself, but many different lawyers and international bodies, year after year, have been calling attention to the Spanish authorities to improve on matters of human rights and judicial rights for any legal cases relating to the Basque conflict."
Continues...
We are gland to learn that this time Madrid has seen its plans to silence another Basque voice foiled by the Irish justice.
Friday, November 14, 2008
Call for Resolution of Basque Conflict
Here you have the info:
De Brún calls for EU role in resolution of Basque conflict
Bairbre de Brún joined prominent international speakers in calling on the European Union to encourage a peace process in the Basque Country.
The call was made at a conference on Conflict Resolution in the EU which was addressed by Bairbre de Brún MEP, prominent South African human rights lawyer Brian Currin and former Secretary General of Interpol Raymond Kendall. Currin and Kendall are both members of the International Initiative for Peace and Dialogue in the Basque Country. The conference was attended by MEPs, staff and parliamentary assistants from all the main political groups in the European Parliament.
Speaking at the Conference de Brún said:
“As the US, the EU and others helped the Irish Peace Process, so too there is an important role for the international community in encouraging a peace process in the Basque country. In the first instance the European Union should encourage inclusive political dialogue in the Basque Country, recognising that a security response to conflict is not sufficient to ensure lasting peace.
“The EU has contributed and continues to contribute to the success story of the Irish Peace Process. We in Ireland can now also give something back through a proposed Europe-wide network of regions and cities that are coming out of conflict or that are living with conflict and exclusion, and through the possibility of establishing in the North of Ireland an EU Centre for Conflict Resolution.”
The Conference on Conflict Resolution in the EU was organised by Basque Friendship: MEPs support group for a peace process in the Basque Country, of which Bairbre de Brún is a member.
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Fascists Against Euskal Herria
This note you are about to read was published at France 24:
Spain looks to France for help against Basque separatists
Friday 26 September 2008
Spain is increasingly seeking France's help against the Basque nationalist groups ETA and Batasuna, which Spain considers the political arm of the terrorist ETA and which has been barred in Spain from taking part in elections since 2003.
By Adeline Percept, France 24 correspondent in Spain
Considered by the Spanish government to be the political branch of the terrorist organisation ETA, the Batasuna, Unity in the Basque language, party is in the cross-hairs of Spain's justice system and the government of Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero's government.
The crackdown against the organisation intensified after June 2006, when the ceasefire agreement between the government and ETA was broken.
After the arrests on Wednesday, September 24, of 11 alleged members of Batasuna in the French Basque Country, Zapatero, said yesterday, while in New York for the UN General assembly, that he does "not exclude the possibility of asking France to ban Batasuna".
In a press release a couple of hours later, Javier Zaragoza, Spain's attorney general, is urging "unconditional collaboration in order to establish a penal process enabling the banning of Batasuna in France".
These statements come in the midst of violent retaliatory actions in Spain's Basque Country, where a police officer was killed in Santona (Cantabria) on September 22 in one of several attacks to take place over recent days.
The French-Spanish collaboration has proved to be the cornerstone in the fight against radical separatism.
"In the 80s, France viewed ETA as a Spanish problem." Antonio Elorza, a political expert at Madrid's Complutense University, told France 24. "In those days, members of ETA travelled to and fro between the two countries completely at their ease. Since his arrival in power, Nicolas Sarkozy has made a huge contribution to Spain's struggle against ETA."
Even if the French branch of Batasuna does play an important role in the organisation, it is less active than its Spanish counterpart.
"There's a big difference between Batasuna in France and in Spain," said Elorza. "Batasuna in Spain is clearly the political arm of ETA, like Sinn Fein and the IRA in Ireland. ETA is active in Spain and until now, 15% of the Basque population has supported the terrorist organisation. That's why ETA has a special rapport with Batasuna, a rapport which couldn't exist in France – popular support there is much more limited. So Batasuna's strategies are different on the two sides of the Pyrennees, but they are complementary."
Two relevant issues come out of this situation.
1) Spain and France are accepting that the so called "Basque conflict" is of an international nature since it involves two countries (with statehood) and one nation (without statehood). Therefore, according to the international treaties, the international community has the obligation to stop making up excuses for Spain's violent campaign of repression against the Basque people and activelly take part in the resolution of the conflict.
2) The Spaniards recognize that they are not willing to truly involve themselves in a peace process for Euskal Herria like England did in regards of Northern Ireland when they included Sinn Fein. Instead, Spain has banned Batasuna and many other political parties and electoral lists, choosing to incarcerate as many Basque activists as they can. They refuse to follow the path shown by England and instead they put all their chips on the support by a fascist minded individual like Nicolas Sarkozy. Just like in 1936, Spain resorts to Europe's worst characters to "solve" its political disagreement with Euskal Herria.
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Spain is Not England
Martin McGuinness: There can be no going back
Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister was once said – in a government euphemism – to have had 'first-hand operational experience' in the IRA. But, he says, since teaming up with his former foe Ian Paisley, attitudes towards him changed overnight
Sunday, 31 August 2008
Brightly coloured sight-seeing buses cruise along the Falls Road, with rain-soaked heads turning as the guides point out the headquarters of Sinn Fein: this is post-Troubles Belfast.
But inside the building, things are not at all relaxed: it is a hive of activity, with men and women bounding purposefully up and down the stairs and in and out of the building. "That door never stops," said the cheerful republican on security duty.
There used to be a great deal of overlap between Sinn Fein and the IRA, but now the "armed struggle" is no more. Once a centre of subversion, the office is now strictly confined to the business of politics.
This is one of the offices used by Martin McGuinness, once regarded by Downing Street as a republican with "first-hand operational experience". Now he is a senior political figure.
As Deputy First Minister, he also has another office in the baronial splendour of Stormont Castle, once occupied by the British ministers who used to run Northern Ireland.
Today Westminster shares power with Belfast's devolved government, which last year came into being amid widespread amazement and a general welcome for what was seen as an epic breakthrough.
McGuinness, a one-time icon of militancy but now a symbol of his movement's politicisation, readily acknowledged the difficulties within the administration that was headed jointly by Sinn Fein and the Democratic Unionist Party.
Not too many years ago, talk of difficulties often brought warnings of a possible surge in violence. Today, this element is gone. There will certainly be crises ahead, but they will be political, and not matters of life and death.
Time was when many viewed McGuinness as one of those who kept the Troubles going, blaming him for prolonging the conflict. Many felt exactly the same about his loyalist counterpart, the Reverend Ian Paisley.
Yet the general perception of both men changed dramatically last year, when Sinn Fein and the DUP formed their governing coalition. Most people were, in the words of McGuinness, "gobsmacked and amazed" that they could make peace after all those decades of implacable enmity.
A double act developed, characterised by so much bonhomie and good cheer that McGuinness and Paisley became known as the "Chuckle Brothers". Paisley (like the IRA) has now left the scene, to be replaced as First Minister by his deputy, Peter Robinson.
The republican leader now sounds almost nostalgic about the Paisley-McGuinness double act, saying of the octogenarian loyalist leader: "I respected his mandate, I respected his age and the courageous decision that he took to come into government."
He recalled how attitudes towards them changed overnight. "Ian Paisley and I would tell each other stories about the people who approached us after making the deal," he said.
"He told me about coming off a plane at Heathrow, and this woman came over and said, 'Mr Paisley, can I shake your hand?' And he said yes, and they shook hands. Then she said that a couple of months earlier she wouldn't have shaken his hand; she would probably have slapped him on the face – and it turned out she was the Mother Superior of a nunnery. But she praised him to high heaven and said he had done a good thing and she wanted to say thanks."
McGuinness has had similar encounters. "I told him about being in the City Hotel in Derry, and this woman came running up to me and said, 'Can I give you a big hug?' And I said yes, and she hugged me. Then she said, 'I wouldn't have given you a big hug before this – I'm an Ian Paisley supporter, but I think what you've done is absolutely tremendous.' That happens to me all the time.
"I think that tells you how things have changed, and that something very, very powerful has happened. And it's not just on this island.
"In all the times I've travelled to London since 1994, everybody that comes up to me tells me to keep up the good work. I haven't heard one angry voice, which is absolutely amazing."
But does he get such reactions from people who have specifically suffered at the hands of the IRA? "I meet people all the time who have been hurt by the IRA," he replied. "Some of the most humbling moments are meeting those people, and they put out their hands and say, 'Well done, this is good, keep it going.'"
He recalled receiving a letter asking for a meeting from a number of disabled police officers. The request produced, he said, "all sorts of opinions within Sinn Fein" on whether or not to hold such a meeting.
"But I met them," he recalled. "When they came into the room. it was clear they were disabled as a result of the conflict and as a result of being injured by the IRA. But they shook hands and said, 'We're here to say we support what you're doing, that we support this process.'"
The IRA killed many police officers, but now Sinn Fein supports policing and justice: McGuinness has paid hospital visits to a number of officers who have been injured in attacks by dissident republicans.
Of the violent dissidents, he commented: "Those people think that more car-bombing, more military activity, is going to bring about the freedom of Ireland, but they're living in cloud cuckoo land.
"They need to recognise and understand that we're in a new situation, and that there cannot be – under any circumstances whatever – any contemplation of going back to the bad old days. People should assist in the apprehension of those who are involved in these deeds."
To those splinter groups who still wage small-scale campaigns of sporadic violence, he said: "My message is that it is a totally futile exercise that runs totally contrary to what the people of Ireland as a whole want.
"Any attempt to plunge us back into the violent days is not going to be supported. Do they really want to see 20,000 or 30,000 soldiers back on the streets?"
The Deputy First Minister gets up at 5.30am each day to drive from his home city of Londonderry to Belfast – a journey he says, with a passing grumble about the state of the motorway, that can take hours.
Then it's attending the Northern Ireland Assembly in Belfast, chairing and taking part in meetings, signing letters, studying documents, seeing delegations until eight or nine o'clock in the evening. "It's just wall-to-wall meetings from morning to night," he said.
McGuinness has never met David Cameron, though he has met members of the Shadow Cabinet. Gordon Brown, he said, has been through "excruciatingly difficult" times.
In common with other political figures, he reported that there is "huge interest, absolutely amazing interest" in the Irish peace process from further afield, citing visitors from Sri Lanka, the Middle East, the Basque country and elsewhere.
He has travelled twice to Helsinki and once to Baghdad for talks on Iraq. "All we can do is offer our experiences. I tell them that without decisive leadership, it is almost impossible to resolve conflict. We have no delusions of grandeur about our abilities to resolve those conflicts – but if it saves lives, why not negotiate now?"
Could that not apply to Ireland as well? "We have to recognise that, in the final analysis, we got it done," he responded.
The performances of McGuinness and his party's president, Gerry Adams, were both commended in the recent book on the peace process by Tony Blair's chief of staff, Jonathan Powell, who spent many hours engrossed in often tense negotiations with them.
Powell wrote: "It was a remarkable act of leadership by Adams and McGuinness to talk the IRA into peace and to persuade them to settle for something far less than they had demanded in 1993." (Of the two, Powell found McGuinness "more human, though we suspected he had more first-hand operational experience".)
The peace process is now at yet another tricky point, since Paisley's replacement in June by the markedly less jovial Peter Robinson. Sinn Fein figures complain that few major governmental decisions have been going their way.
McGuinness is reserved, but not hostile, when talking about his new governmental partner. "I have entered into the relationship with Peter Robinson with a commitment and dedication to make it work," he said.
"I think it's fair to say there have been difficulties, but my assessment is: why would he not want it to work? It's still early days in the leadership of Peter Robinson, but I'm working on the basis that he wants this to succeed. I'm optimistic."
There are grumbles, in the republican grassroots, that the DUP is blocking what Sinn Fein would like to see happening in important areas such as policing and justice, education reform, the status of the Irish language and the future of the old Maze prison.
McGuinness acknowledged that there was a certain amount of restlessness and frustration in the republican community, and added: "I suppose that has been a feature of the process from the very beginning – people are impatient for change, and I think rightly so.
"Nobody could say with their hand on their heart that, at this stage, the institutions have delivered everything that people want. But I think what they want to know is: are they beginning to deliver and is the potential there for delivery?
"All of this is worth nothing if it doesn't make a difference, a real difference."
The power-sharing executive clearly has its stresses and strains: republicans, as ever, want rapid movement on various fronts, while loyalists, as usual, are suspicious of wholesale change. Robinson is certainly in favour of the settlement, but some in his party want to see rather less chuckling and rather more opposition to the republican agenda.
McGuinness is hopeful. "A Rubicon has been crossed by everybody, and the project for me now is to ensure that there can be no going back. This is the only sane and sensible way forward for all of us," he insisted. "This is the best way to break down the old hatreds and divisions."
As a young man, he pursued military victory over his opponents; now, in his late fifties, his talk is of relationships, of negotiation, of mandates, of his belief that violence is futile.
What has he learnt in the course of his controversial, incident-packed career? "Compromises have had to be made: compromise is a dirty word in the course of Irish politics, but people recognise that they had to be made," he said.
"I'll tell you what I've learnt. I've learnt that nothing is impossible – that no matter how things are, if there's a will to find a way through, then a way will be found."
Like I said in the post's title, Spain is not England.
The euphemism is quite easy to understand, England knew that McGuinness was an IRA member, the big bad "T" word was involved, and yet, now he is considered a peace maker.
This is proof that every conflict can be resolved if all parts involved are really and honestly willing to negotiate. That is what is lacking in the ongoing conflict between Spain and Euskal Herria, true and honest will to build a new future without one nation being imprisoned by the other.
One more thing, the members of the Irish diaspora were never reluctant to show their full support for an independent and then unified Ireland, unlike the Basque diaspora, too happy to play along with what Lakua dictates and Madrid approves.
Friday, May 16, 2008
Learning Experience In Ireland
Basque youth Delegation in Ireland
A BASQUE youth movement delegation has been visiting Ireland over the last week to learn about the Peace Process 10 years into the Good Friday Agreement, to raise awareness of the Basque political situation, and to increase meaningful engagement with Ógra Shinn Féin and community groups.
The Basque delegation included activists from the international, student and media projects.
During the week, the Basque youth visited Tyrone, Armagh, Lurgan, Fermanagh, Belfast, Down, Dublin, Monaghan and Derry.
They also addressed a number of public meetings with enthusiastic crowds at each event engaging in an interesting discussion.
They spoke at length about the growth of the Basque youth movement and how the Spanish and French states have responded with a huge level of repression in an attempt to stem their phenomenal growth. There was a huge emphasis on the role of the Basque language in promoting a Basque identity and helping to progress their struggle.
As part of the extensive tour, the delegation met with representatives of Ógra Shinn Féin, the National Graves Association, Sinn Féin councillors, MLAs, and TDs, Sinn Féin’s Roinn an Chultúir, community and student activists, ASIST (Applied Suicide Intervention Skills) workers, and former political prisoners.
The engagements with the various strands of Irish republican activity opened up huge levels of debate and suggestions on how both the Irish and Basques can move forward collectively in pursuit of our common goals.
To explain the historical context of the Irish republican struggle, the Basque youth were involved in a number of tours which explored the conflict and resistance from 1798 until the modern day.
Sites of particular interest were a walking tour of Dublin, Tyrone, Belfast, Derry, Fermanagh and Narrow Water in County Down.
The delegation also held a minute’s silence at the site of the Loughgall massacre to mark the 21st anniversary.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Sinn Féin's Solidarity
MEP welcomes start of International Solidarity Week with Basque Country
SINN FÉIN MEP Bairbre de Brún has welcomed the start of International Solidarity Week with the Basque Country.
Speaking on Tuesday, 19 February Bairbre de Brún said:
“I welcome the start of International solidarity week with the Basque Country.
“Sinn Féin has argued the need to revive the Basque Peace Process. The banning of Batasuna and jailing of political representatives including democratically elected representatives is an impediment to this.
“We are now concerned that the Spanish administration has begun the process of banning two other parties, EHAK and ANV. This will further impede any search for forward progress, which requires that every effort be made to improve and encourage dialogue between all of the parties in the Basque County and the Spanish government.
“Central to this is the rights of voters to have access to parties and political representatives of their choice.
“I would once again repeat the call for genuine dialogue and engagement. This can be the only way forward if a proper process of conflict resolution is to be put in place.”
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Sinn Féin in Gernika
International : Sinn Féin attends Gernika solidarity launch
International network for Basque independence
ELECTED representatives from Ireland, the Basque Country, Germany, Scotland, Flanders and Catalonia met at the beginning of November at the first gathering of the Gernika Network for Self-determination, an alliance to internationalise the plight of the Basque pro-independence movement.
This new initiative was launched on 25 April in the Basque town of Gernika, coinciding with the 70th anniversary of the Nazi bombing of the town during the Spanish Civil War and it focuses on the right to self-determination for the Basque people.
Ireland was represented by Sinn Féin MLA Francie Brolly. Others attending were Michael Leutert, MP of the German party Die Linke (The Left) and member of the Bundestag’s Human Rights Commission; Flemish MP Jan Loones; SNP member Lloyd Quinan, who is currently working in the independence dialogue initiative launched by Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond MP; and Otger Amatller, Laia Jurado, Ana María Guijarro and Anna Gabriel, councillors of the Catalan party, Candidatures d’Unitat Popular (CUP). Batasuna’s representatives Karmelo Landa and Eusebio Lasa were also present.
There was an official reception in Gernika’s town hall attended by the town’s local government, led by Basque nationalist parties EA and ANV, and members of Gernika Batzordea.
Some of the signatories to the Gernika Network initiative are working ahead in highlighting the situation in the Basque Country. In Italy, Rifundazione Comunista and the Green Party have tabled motions in the Senate in relation to the rights of Basque people to decide on their future.
Lloyd Quinan (SNP, Scotland) pointed out the closeness between his country and the Basque Country “because we want to be part of the international community and we have the right to our own voice in the United Nations Assembly”. The SNP is committed to publicise the Basque situation in Scotland, he said, “because it is necessary that we all defend the human and political right of all citizens in all countries around the world”.
German MP Michael Leutert referred to Hitler’s support for the Franco regime’s suppression of the Basques. It would never be forgotten, he said. “We Germans have a historical responsibility to contribute to the solution of those conflicts that violated human rights. I hope this network will serve to restore the rights of the Basques.
“Next year we will be celebrating 50 years of the UN Charter of Human Rights and there will be an opportunity to vindicate the rights of this people.”
Francie Brolly referred to an issue particularly important to Irish and Basque people: their languages. Basque and Gaelic are key elements in the identity of both nations. Brolly highlighted the value of keeping minority languages alive, as they represent “the soul of humankind”.
Good for them!
Friday, October 12, 2007
Garzón Exposed
11 October, 2007
Other News
Spanish judge targets Batasuna
BY SALLY GALLAGHER
SPANISH Judge Baltasar Garzón is back to his normal self. This you may remember is the man possessed of the peculiar notion that all defenders of the Basque right to self-determination should be considered ‘terrorists’.
On Thursday, 4 October, Judge Baltasar once again demonstrated the judicial application of this principle when he imprisoned 21 people who had been attending a meeting of pro-independence party Herri Batasuna in the village of Segura, Gipuzkoa, in the Basque Country. Four of those imprisoned were later released on bail of between €10,000 and €24,000. And among those imprisoned were, coincidentally, several members of the national executive of Herri Batasuna. Some of those jailed have been charged with “membership of a terrorist organisation”.
Pernando Barrena, who has represented Batasuna at the Sinn Féin Ard Fheis in recent years, denounced Garzón’s decision to order the arrest and imprisonment of Batasuna’s leadership as an act of “revenge”. Garzon, he said, wants to punish the Basque nationalist Left for the position they adopted in the recently failed negotiations with the government.
Barrena did not attend the meeting in Segura as he was hosting Sinn Féin’s Bairbre de Brún MEP and Pat Rice, who had travelled to the Basque Country to visit Arnaldo Otegi, Batasuna’s chief spokesperson, imprisoned last June, in Martutene Prison.
Otegi has been a key player in promoting the peace process and a negotiated settlement in the Basque Country. Sinn Féin has called for his immediate release.
Commenting on the arrest of the national executive of Batasuna by Spanish police in Segura, a Sinn Féin spokesperson said:
“We have argued for some time that the banning of Batasuna and the jailing of its political representatives is not conducive to the successful advancement of a peace process in the region. All legal restrictions against Batasuna should be lifted.”
Pernando Barrena said that, with elections due in Spain in a few short months, the ruling Spanish Socialist Party, PSOE, “needs to make a show to the Spanish of its capacity to be even more ruthless than the PP [the right-wing opposition party] when it wants to, when striking against the Basque pro-independence camp”.
Despite this latest attack against the political representatives of the independence movement, Pernando Barrena was insistent that the Basque nationalist Left is strongly committed to seeking “a solution and a peace deal” as a way out of the present political conflict. He had the following message for the Madrid government:
“The PSOE Government is not in dispute with the 23 people it has just arrested, or even with the whole of the nationalist Left movement. Their disagreement is with a people that wish to be their own masters. Their dispute is with the Basque Country.”
NEW ATTACK
Following the raid on Segura, police reportedly brought the Batasuna spokesperson, Joseba Permach, to witness a further raid on the offices of Communist Party of the Basque Country headquarters. Permach is not a member of that organisation.
Of late, the Spanish media has spoken of the possibility of a new attack against Batasuna. The common thread is that Garzón’s action was initiated in the office of the Spanish Prime Minister, José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
On 9 September, the Spanish daily, El Pais, pointed out that Zapatero’s strategy against the Basque independence movement would include attacks against the political leadership of Batasuna and sister organisations.
On 30 September, another paper, Público, announced that the judiciary would force “the renovation of Batasuna” as part of a strategy designed by the government to fight ETA ahead of the elections.
There is little or nothing I could add but a heart felt thank you to our Irish friends.
Saturday, October 06, 2007
Act of Revenge
Well, incensed by the Basque compromise to a peace process that aimed at a political resolution of the Basque conflict, now Zapatero is rabidly going after everyone, just like Aznar did before him. And Zapatero is in a hurry because he knows that the backwards Spanish electorate could reinstate the Franco styled Partido Popular back in power next year, how can he forget the millions who voted for Rajoy during the past electoral process even after Aznar and the members of the PP where caught with their pants down trying to place the blame of the attacks in Madrid on the Basques knowing that all the evidence pointed at retaliation for Aznar's support of Bush's genocidal war in Iraq.
Here you have an article published by Gara that talks about how Zapatero is now striking back at all of those who demonstrated that the Basques stand for peace while the Spaniards stand for colonialist domination:
GARA > Ultima hora >
POLICE CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE PRO-INDEPENDENCE LEFT
Batasuna leader says PSOE is out for revenge against the nationalist Left
“The PSOE [Spanish Socialist Party] is looking for revenge and wants to punish the Basque nationalist Left for the position they adopted in the [recently failed] negotiations,” charged Pernando Barrena in response to Thursday night’s police operation against members of the leadership of the Basque political party Batasuna, in which 23 people have been arrested.
05/10/2007 20:50:00
DONOSTIA-. “It is perfectly clear to us that yesterday’s police operation was a political crackdown with the complicity of the Public Prosecutor’s office targeting the Basque pro-independence movement, in order to punish the movement and take revenge because the nationalist Left stuck to its guns in the negotiations and wouldn’t give in to the conditions the PSOE had tried to force on it,” explained Pernando Barrena, a prominent member of Batasuna’s collective leadership, outside Martutene prison where several of his arrested colleagues are now being held.
Mr Barrena was in the company of Bairbre de Brun and Pat Rice, politicians belonging to the Irish Sinn Féin party who had come to Martutene to visit Arnaldo Otegi, Batasuna’s chief spokesperson, who is also now in prison.
Sharing his thoughts about Thursday’s operation, Mr Barrena expressed indignation at the way in which the arrests had been carried out, violating the right of assembly, and at night-time. He pointed out that when the leaders now arrested were previously summoned by the Spanish court to declare they had presented themselves of their own free will and in an orderly fashion.
In Thursday night’s flash raid, hooded Spanish police officers positioned themselves in the street in the small Gipuzkoan town where the Batasuna leadership were holding a meeting, and forced them into police vehicles as they were leaving the premises. In Mr Barrena’s mind there can be only one explanation: “The judge himself aims to provoke and foster public alarm, which only actually exists in his own mind.”
But he added that only a few months away from upcoming elections, the ruling Spanish party, PSOE, “needs to make a show to the Spanish of its capacity to be even more ruthless than the PP [the right-wing opposition party] when it wants to, when striking against the Basque pro-independence camp.”
Pernando Barrena was insistent that the Basque nationalist Left is strongly committed to seeking “a solution and a peace deal” as a way out of the present political conflict, and had the following message for the Madrid government: “The PSOE government has no quarrel with the 23 people it has just arrested, or even with the whole movement of the nationalist Left. Their quarrel is with a people that wish to be their own masters. Their quarrel is with Euskal Herria.”
Finally, Mr Barrena called on Basques to reject these arrests and take part in protests to denounce them, and to let the PSOE know “that they have gone too far and that there is no room for such behaviour in the present political scenario; and tell them that what the Basque Country needs is a political settlement that will lead to peace and respect for all people’s rights”.
Saturday, July 14, 2007
Interview with Segi Members in Ireland
Repression, criminalisation no solutions to conflict
Basque conflict will only be resolved by negotiation – SEGI
Segi, the Basque youth organisation was banned by the Spanish judge, Baltasar Garzón in February 2002. Previously, Garzón had banned the two Basque youth organisations that preceded Segi – Jarrai and Haika. Forty two youth, members of the executive of the groups, were charged with membership of ETA, as Garzón considered that supporting the right to self-determination of the Basque people is not only illegal, but criminal.
The case descended into a farce when another judge of the Audiencia National – the Spanish version of the Special Criminal Court, considered that Garzón’s arguments were not valid and released all detainees, after handling them minimum sentences for membership of illegal organisations. However, 19 of the 23 released were again imprisoned last February, after the court changed the initial sentence. The new decision of the Audiencia National took place only weeks after ETA planted a bomb in the carpark of Madrid airport.
The increasing repression suffered by the Basque pro-independence movement and the immediate imprisonment linked to membership of any of the banned organisations is the backdrop to the decision by two members of Segi who visited Ireland early this month deciding not to disclose their identities. During their Irish visit, An Phoblacht’s SALLY GALLAGHER spoke to the Segi representatives.
What is the reason for this visit to Ireland?
We came to help organise the trip that members of Ógra Shinn Fein are going to make to the Basque Country in September
How is your relationship with Ógra Sinn Fein?
The relationship with Ógra is a few years old already, and we consider it something important as they are an organisation very similar to ours, with common areas of work. This allows us to share points of view and reflections on our political projects. It is also very important for us because they have the experience of the kind of peace process we are working for. Even when in many aspects the situation in Ireland is different, their experience is something we can learn from.
Could you describe the situation faced by the Basque youth movement at the moment?
The situation is that, since January when the Spanish Special Court declared SEGI a terrorist organisation, we have been prosecuted for our activities. Our former leader is serving a six-year jail sentence. We cannot even put up a banner or a poster in the street because we risk being identified by the police, sent to Madrid, being charged with membership of a terrorist organisation and being sent to prison. But even in this environment people keep organising, SEGI keeps working and fighting but we have to take measures, like not publicising our identities, so as not to facilitate the police in throwing us in jail.
What were the arguments used by the Spanish courts to label SEGI as a terrorist organisation?
The truth is that we do not believe there was any judicial basis for it. From our point of view it was a straightforward political decision. SEGI is dangerous for them, as we fight for a political project, we support independence for the Basque Country, and we are socialist, so we fight the Spanish and French capitalist imposition in the Basque Country. What they were trying to achieve was to end our struggle and to take us off the political scene.
But, why at this particular moment? SEGI or the previous youth organisations have been active since the 1980s. So, why now?
I think it was a consequence of the Spanish Popular Party being in government. They took the decision that as part of their strategy of oppression against the Basque Country they would attack the political structures of the Basque pro-independence movement. What they were trying to do was to establish that everything is ETA, so every single political organisation or social movement working for the national and social liberation of the Basque Country were accused of being an integral part of ETA.
This allowed for their criminalisation and opened the door to their illegalisation. And within this strategy they have proceeded against numerous political and social organisations. The first to go through the whole procedure has been JARRA/HAIKA/SEGI which are the different youth organisations that have been active in the Basque Country. Labelling us a terrorist organisation is the last step in this process.
Has the fact of being declared a terrorist organisation had any effect in the work of the youth movement?
Not really. I am not going to deny that we are afraid because labelling an organisation as ‘terrorist’ is a major step. But the truth is that there has not been any gap in our work. People keep organising in the colleges, towns, cities. We keep working. We keep fighting in the streets. The fact is that when we were declared illegal for the first time, some five years ago, we had a rough time as we had to accommodate our work to a new reality – our way of working had to be adapted to the new situation. But a lot of time has passed since then and we have improved a lot. So when they declared us a terrorist organisation last February, people did not feel that the situation had changed that much as we were already illegal.
But six years in jail is a long time. Being harassed by the police is one thing but going to jail is something totally different, especially when you are a teenager.
As I said we were already an illegal organisation. We were supposed to be a clandestine organisation. Even if being declared a terrorist organisation is qualitatively different, the truth is that during the period from which we had been declared illegal until last February, we had time to overcome our fears and got ready to face that situation.
Yes you can face a six years long or an even longer jail sentence but the truth is that we were facing similar ones before. I think that when people have a clear idea of what they are they fighting for and they hold their principles dear, they are ready to take the risk.
Now that ETA’s ceasefire is over, after 14 months, how does SEGI see the future?
We were hopeful with the situation up to recently, not only because of the ceasefire but also because we could see how the social and political situation was changing in the last few years. There was a majority in the Basque Country looking for a change, and ETA seemed to have taken into account those social and political conditions as it took the decision to use the ceasefire to approach a new scenario where the political conflict could be solved in a political way. But the reality was that for over a year the Socialist Party in the Spanish Government – with the help of the Basque Nationalist Party PNV – resisted taking any step towards the resolution of the conflict. The negotiations have been constantly stalled by these two parties. They did not seem to be ready to approach a solution based on the two main factors that caused the conflict in the first place – territoriality and the right to self-determination.
Even if everybody agrees that the conflict has political roots, they were not ready to negotiate a political solution to the conflict. The left pro-independence movement put on the table a political proposal to end the conflict. This proposal was based on those two factors that were the key to the conflict, but the Spanish Government and the PNV said no to the proposals and failed to come up with an alternative.
And now?
Batasuna’s political proposal is the key to the solution and we need to publicise the proposal among the people in the Basque Country. Once a majority knows the ins and outs of it, we will have to try to push all the political parties to negotiate, because we know that the solution will come from negotiation. There is no other way. Repression or criminalisation are not solutions.
In this new scenario what is the role of SEGI?
Our aim is to fight for, and build up our independence on a daily basis, while trying to gather as much strength as we can around the pro-independence Basque movement. But at this moment in time we also see it as our responsibility to publicise the content of the political proposal for the solution of the conflict, among youth. Now, during the summer; that will be our main line of work and we will keep working on those issues that we usually do such as housing, students rights, etc.
Thursday, June 08, 2006
Batasuna Speaks Out
Such is the case of Judge-Prosecutor (you read that right, that is the way it is in Spain) Fernando Grande-Marlaska, who each time that Batasuna members get together to work towards the peace process, Grande-Marlaska dispatches police elements to disband the meetings.
Well, the Batasuna leadership are fed up with this ill conceived attitude by the likes of Grande-Marlaska, heir to the previous Inquisidor Baltasar Garzón.
This is what they have to say, via EITb:
Judge Marlaska's Ban
"Batasuna can't be dependent on judge's whims", party speaker
06/08/2006The banned Batasuna representative, Joseba Álvarez, has affirmed that National Court judge Fernando Grande-Marlaska has not avoided previous Batasuna's press conferences, and he has done so now with yesterday's event as he might be wanting to hinder the peace process. Spanish Police halted a press conference by the leftwing nationalist party yesterday in Pamplona/Iruña.
In his opinion, "these events after the ceasefire, after the verification of the ceasefire, when everybody announces the setting up of the process, are incomprehensible and must be avoided."
Furthermore, he has stated that the meeting between Basque socialists' leader, Patxi López, and Batasuna's Arnaldo Otegi, can't be dependent on the legality of the party, although that is an issue to be solved in the future.
"Batasuna is a speaker that talks with everybody, even with the Socialist Party, throughout all these months and years, but eventually this issue must be also solved, but Batasuna's legalisation can't be used as an excuse to hinder those meetings," he has noted.
Álvarez has pointed out that Batasuna "can't be dependent on a judicial intervention or the whims of a judge who thinks an event was not a crime for five months, and once everything is verified and seems to be kicking off, he takes such a measure as banning a press conference."
Gerry Adams
Álvarez has said that the visit by Sinn Féin leader, Gerry Adams, has contributed "the message" based on the Irish experience, message of not arbitrating a process with an outlawed political force because that has no sense."
Furthermore, he has affirmed that Adams' message for leftwing nationalism was to be patient, because there can be many provocations, like yesterday's in Pamplona/Iruña.
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Adams in Madrid
Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams listens to a question during a news conference at the Ritz Hotel in Madrid, Wednesday June 7, 2006. Adams, who met with Basque separatist Batasuna party leader Arnaldo Otegi Y Basque separatist Batasuna party Arnaldo Otegi Tuesday, is in Spain to support the peace process. (AP Photo/Paul White)Tuesday, June 06, 2006
Adams in Bilbo
Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, right, shakes hands with the leader of the Basque separatist Batasuna party Arnaldo Otegi, on his arrival at the airport in Bilbao, northern Spain, Tuesday June 6, 2006. Adams is in the Basque area of Spain to support the peace process. (AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)Thursday, June 01, 2006
The Ban on Gerry Adams
Such is the case of the big wigs at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. They decided that famous Irish politician Gerry Adams was not suitable for the opening of the exhibition they are to host called "Che Guevara: Revolutionary and Icon" (boy, famous Che lovers Val Prieto and Dean Esmay are going to be so happy when they find out about this exhibit).
Back to our topic.
Seems like some people in England's establishment are not too happy with Gerry Adams, a staunch defender of the Irish dream to reunite one day, leaving behind the last remnant of Brittish imperialism and tyranny in the green island.
It is then quite ironic that a revolutionary and an icon of freedom today, has been rejected from the list of guests that the exhibit's curator, Trisha Ziff, provided. Seems like she is not to happy that the zealots also decided to exercise some censorship on her work, forcing her to post the missing information on her own page.
To add insult to injury, the people at the V&A decided not to welcome Gerry Adams right when the Irish politician is deeply involved in the peaceful resolution of the Basque Country's conflict. Ironically enough, Che Guevara is of Basque background, his father's family having moved from Bilbo (Bilbao) to Argentina in the late XIX century.
Seems like some people in positions of power in England are as backwards as their Spanish counterparts, like for example, those who refuse for Picasso's "Guernica" to go to Euskal Herria.
Anyway, here you have the story as it was published by The GuardianUnlimited:
Sorry Gerry. You're just not the right sort for Che's V&A party
Curator furious as 'inappropriate' Adams barred from guest list
Duncan Campbell
Friday June 2, 2006
The Guardian
Che Guevara himself would have enjoyed the controversy. The Victoria and Albert Museum has decided that Gerry Adams, the Sinn Féin leader, should be removed from the guest list for next week's opening of its big exhibition on the "revolutionary and icon" because his attendance would not be "appropriate".The museum authorities felt that because there was a high-profile exhibition of 60s fashion opening simultaneously, with many models and fashion photographers due to attend, Mr Adams's presence would not be "relevant". So Jerry Hall is on the guest list - but not Gerry Adams.
The decision has infuriated the exhibition's curator, Trisha Ziff. Yesterday Mr Adams said he wondered if Guevara would also have been barred, had he still been alive.
The exhibition arrives in London trailing plaudits. In Mexico City it was front-page news and increased museum attendance eightfold, while in Los Angeles it prompted protests by rightwing Cubans. Ms Ziff, originally from Leeds and now living in Mexico City, produced the exhibition of both rare and familiar photos, and was looking forward to a display in one of Britain's most prestigious venues. She submitted her guest list, which included Mr Adams, a personal friend with whom she had worked on exhibitions in the past.
She then received an email from Shaun Cole, acting head of the contemporary programme at the V&A, who told her all guests had been approved "except Gerry Adams, who is not relevant or appropriate". Ms Ziff, already unhappy that the museum had removed much of the text accompanying and explaining the images, which has now been posted on the website instead, said: "I was gobsmacked. Inviting Gerry was not a stunt and it never occurred to me there would be a problem."
After further inquiries, she was told the decision had been taken by "senior staff who won't be moved on this point". She inquired further and was then told by the museum's head of public affairs, Damien Whitmore, via email, that he needed help "with a difficult and very delicate situation".
Two other exhibitions were opening the same night, on design and fashion in the 60s, the latter sponsored by Miss Selfridge, which was bringing along "a number of models and actresses from the 60s as well as a number of fashion press".
He explained: "My difficulty is that the evening will attract a fashion crowd ... My sense is that having Gerry Adams there may not be appropriate because of this joint event ... I am sure you will understand our reasons for not inviting him."
Ms Ziff, however, does not understand, particularly as Mr Adams had jokingly told her he would have looked out his old Afghan jacket and loons for the occasion. She contacted Mark Jones, V&A director, who told her the museum had a policy of not inviting people affiliated to any political party. However, it turns out that Ken Livingstone, London's Labour mayor, has been invited.
"I find the attitude of the museum bizarre and nonsensical," said Mr Adams yesterday. "On the basis of the current 'reason' offered by the V&A of refusing to invite politicians, it would appear that if Che was alive, he would be barred from his own exhibition. The British establishment works in wondrous ways."
He would, as it happens, be in Spain, where he is due to be meeting political figures involved in peace efforts in the Basque country. But he found it odd that he was now welcome at 10 Downing Street but not at the V&A.
Ms Ziff remains dismayed. "It's extraordinary," she said. "The V&A have tried to turn it all [the Guevara exhibition] into just a design image and remove the resonance from it all.
"But you can't just turn Che Guevara into a commodity. The photo of Che by Alfredo Korda is the most reproduced image in history but it still has power. You can call it a storm in a teacup but it is really insidious. And on top of all that, the V&A shop is selling all these images of Che - there is even a Che lip balm.I'm amazed at the mindset."
Among items for sale during the exhibition will be a Che finger puppet, Che chocolate cigar, Che doll and Che cigar box as well as T-shirts, stickers, neon signs and badges.
A V&A spokeswoman said the museum had no comment. She could neither confirm nor deny a museum policy of not inviting politicians to exhibitions. A Miss Selfridge spokeswoman said about 1,000 guests from the world of fashion, design and photography were being invited to the joint opening.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
The Ceasefire is for Real
Spain: ETA on a new track
By Geoff Pingree and Lisa Abend, Correspondents of The Christian Science Monitor
Wed May 10, 4:00 AM ET
When arsonists destroyed José Antonio Mendive's family business last month, he did not hesitate to cast blame.
"It was terrorism, pure and simple," says the town councilman from the Navarra region. Many suspect supporters of Basque separatist group ETA were responsible.
But in the context of ETA's recent cease-fire, little is pure or simple. Since March 22, when the group declared an end to nearly 40 years of armed struggle for Basque independence, Spain has sought to determine whether the outlawed group's avowal of a "permanent" cease-fire was, in fact, sincere.
Several incidents of extortion and violence in April made many Spaniards, including opposition leaders in Parliament, skeptical. The Socialist administration, however, appears satisfied that ETA is on a new track, and is turning its attention to the next step: garnering support for opening peace talks with ETA through its banned political wing, Batasuna.
"We're seeing signs that suggest a new attitude," said Secretary of Communication Fernando Moraleda last Thursday, as the government announced that its third investigation of ETA's activities affirmed that the group was complying with the truce.
Mr. Moraleda's statement followed Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's most recent round of discussions with leaders of other parties, through which the prime minister is preparing to request - probably in June - that Parliament permit his government to openly negotiate with Batasuna.
At the moment, the chief obstacle to such negotiations is disagreement over Batasuna's legal status. Spain's 2003 Law of Parties, which banned political organizations that supported terrorism, made the Basque party illegal.
But ETA's cease-fire has opened a door for reviving Batasuna's legitimacy. "If everything continues as it is supposed to, it's inevitable that Batasuna will be a legal party again," says Juan Avilés, terrorism expert at Spain's Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia. "ETA is not going to give up its weapons for nothing; it's going to demand a concession."
Still, after years of deadlock between Batasuna and the government - especially under the administration of José María Aznar, Zapatero's conservative predecessor - over control of the Basque region, it will be difficult to restore the nationalist group to the fold of legitimate parties.
"It is one of the ironies - or pathologies - of these peace processes that a party denounced for years now becomes acceptable," says Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca, a political scientist at Madrid's Complutense University. "But Batasuna has made some radical changes. It wasn't long ago it insisted only Basque nationalists had the right to decide the Basque country's future, yet now it recognizes it must include political forces it disagrees with."
Basque nationalists and their supporters believe the Spanish government's position on Batasuna must also change - and soon. "From the point of view of conflict resolution, it defies belief that a key political party would be illegal," observes Eoin O'Broin, director of European Affairs for the Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein.
Indeed, the greatest danger to the peace process, according to Mr. O'Broin, is that reinstatement won't come quickly enough. "New forms of political engagement need to be shown to work."
Ten years' experience in the Irish peace process gives the Sinn Fein spokesman hope that Spain's change of government two years ago will nourish the current peace efforts.
"The IRA called a cease-fire in 1994 that collapsed because of John Major, but in 1996 and 1997, Tony Blair decided to break with Major's strategy of repression and criminalization, and we got the Good Friday accords - there's a lesson there for Zapatero," says O'Broin. "ETA's 1998 truce received no reciprocal response from [then prime minister] Aznar, so the process broke down, and it wasn't until [Zapatero's] Socialist government came to power that something happened."
Spaniards remain cautious about the prospects for a lasting peace, and are still sharply divided about whether last month's low-level street violence, known by the Basque phrase kale borroka, constitutes a rupture in the cease-fire.
In April, extortion letters allegedly authored by ETA were delivered to various Navarrese businessmen, generating a hot debate about whether they were authored before or after the cease-fire.
And in addition to the attack in Barañaín on Mr. Mendive's hardware store, a group of hooded figures in the Basque town of Getxo lobbed Molotov cocktails into an insurance company's offices.
"Of course the truce is broken," says Mendive in a telephone interview. "You have to call things by their true names." But others are more equivocal.
"There have been no deaths, no bombs," says Mr. Sánchez-Cuenca, who agrees with the government's assessment. "Kale borroka represents a gray area, and it's not clear who is responsible. But it does not appear that ETA is the direct author."
Batasuna's public mention of the two incidents - calling them "very grave" and expressing hope that "such actions will not occur again" - has also encouraged those who believe in ETA's good intentions.
"ETA called the truce of 1998 for political reasons, and it broke down for political reasons," says Sánchez-Cuenca, who has dedicated his career to studying the terrorist group. "But this cease-fire happened because ETA is debilitated - it's a totally different situation."
After four decades of violence and failed peace efforts, hope is growing that this time the outcome will be different, too.
Friday, April 28, 2006
Today at EITB
These two notes appear today courtesy of EITb:
Outlawed Batasuna affirms one part can't build process on its own
Basque premier demands Law takes "new stage" into accountBatasuna leader Joseba Permach has denounced today that the Spanish Government is still using a "repressive strategy" revealed by Otegi's latest sentence. He has assured that "it's impossible to move a peace process forwards with the help of "an only part."
Permach and also Batasuna leader Juan Joxe Petrikorena have referred to the 15-month jail sentence for Arnaldo Otegi for praising terrorism unveiled yesterday. They have also referred to the arrest of Sandra Barrenetxea, who has denounced tortures, the shutdown of a bar linked to leftwing nationalism and the denial of permission for Otegi and Pernando Barrena to travel to Ireland to take part in a Sinn Fein act.
Yesterday, Spanish National Court sentenced leader of Batasuna, Arnaldo Otegi, to 15 years in jail. In view of the sentence for Otegi, charged with praising terrorism, the Basque premier, Juan José Ibarretxe, has asserted that a new stage is open in terms of politics and "spreading justice."
Juan José Ibarretxe affirmed so referring to Otegi's offence of glorifying terrorism in a tribute paid to a late senior member of the Basque armed group ETA, José Miguel Beñaran Argala, in the Basque town of Arrigorriaga, city nearby Bilbao.
The Basque premier has pointed out that everyone should "match up with new times, justice, politics, and media." "We should take into account the new stage is open in terms of politics and spreading justice."
The Basque premier, who attended the popular celebration of San Prudencio in Vitoria-Gasteiz, has stressed the importance of separating powers in a democracy.
A Spanish Judge on Friday denied permission to two prominent Basque nationalist politicians to travel to Ireland to attend a Sinn Fein political event next month, court officials said.
National Court Judge Fernando Grande-Marlaska said in a ruling that Arnaldo Otegi and Pernando Barrena would go in representation of an outlawed organization and that there is a risk of them fleeing the country.
In turn, leftwing trade union LAB representative, Rafa Díez, has been given permission to make that trip and represent his union in the political event.
Díez, Otegi and Barrena had asked the judge for permission to leave Spain for Ireland next May 6-12. Otegi and Barrena are both leaders of the outlawed Batasuna party, considered the political wing of the armed group ETA, which declared a permanent cease-fire last month.
Otegi was convicted Thursday of defending terrorism and sentenced to 15 months in prison.
This can tell you who wants peace, and who is rather comfortable with violence.
In other news, EITB tells us about Atxaga's presence in New York:
Basque writer Bernardo Atxaga at NY Festival of International Lit
The Basque well-known writer Bernardo Atxaga is taking part these days in the PEN World Voices, the New York Festival of International Literature, which has gathered 134 writers from 41 countries. The festival started on April 25 and will last until April 30.
Bernardo Atxaga was born in Asteasu, Gipuzkoa, in 1951. He is a poet and novelist, and writes both in Basque and in Spanish. He published his first book of poems Ziutateak (The Cities) in 1976 and two years later Etiopía, for which he won the Critic's Prize. Obabakoak was awarded Spain's National Literature Prize in 1989 and has been translated into more than 20 languages. Recently, a movie based on this novel has been in cinemas.
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Moderate View Point
It means analysing both parts of the issue, without leaning or supporting either part, it also means demanding the same degree of compromise from both parties involved in an issue.
Example?
This fine article by John Cherian, published at Frontline.
Peace on offer
The Basque separatist group ETA announces a ceasefire indicating its willingness to initiate a peace process with the Spanish government.WITH the Euskadi ta Askatasuna (ETA), the armed wing of the Basque separatists, announcing a permanent ceasefire on March 22, one of the longest and bloodiest insurgencies in Europe may be grinding to a halt. Since the beginning of 2006, there were broad indications from the Spanish government that peace in the Basque region is imminent.
For most of the past 38 years, ETA has carried on a violent struggle against the central government in Madrid. More than 800 people have been killed in the fight. ETA's goal is to create an independent Basque state comprising parts of northern Spain and southwest France.
Basques, who number around 2.1 million, are linguistically and culturally different from the Spanish.
A group of young Basques influenced by revolutionary socialism, anti-imperialism and Basque nationalism formed ETA in 1959. It started the armed rebellion in 1968 when General Francisco Franco was in power. It was soon accepted as a liberation movement international
After Franco's demise and the onset of democracy, the Basque region was given the most autonomy among Spain's 17 regions. However, ETA insisted on complete independence. Socialist Prime Minister Jorge Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, after his surprise victory in the 2004 elections, made a peace accord with the Basques a priority. The Spanish Parliament gave him its backing to open talks with the separatists if ETA showed a "clear will" to give up violence. Zapatero insisted that ETA first announce a "permanent ceasefire".
Positive signals from ETA in late March, which included a statement of its intention to promote "a democratic process in the Basque country", helped kick-start a peace process. The statement, read out by a masked woman flanked by two masked men, said that the Basque people would be able to have a "voice and the power to decide their future". They were seen sitting in front of a table that had a white tablecloth with a black text, which read: Euskai Herria (Basque country). ETA is unlikely to give up formally on its demand for a referendum on independence. It will be difficult for any government in Madrid to accede to this demand as this could lead to the unravelling of Spain. Many other Spanish regions are clamouring for greater autonomy.
The ceasefire announcement, however, was treated with scepticism and a degree of contempt by the main Opposition, the right-wing Popular Party (P.P.). There seems to be no love lost between the conservative P.P. and ETA. The conservatives, while in government, had tried to pin the blame for the 2004 Madrid train bombings on ETA. The terrorist bombings took place at a time when the country was preparing for general elections. When it became clear that it was an Al Qaeda-affiliated group that was responsible for the atrocity, the Spanish people voted the Conservatives out, who until then seemed poised for victory. Apparently, the people were angry with the then Prime Minster Jose Maria Aznar's blatant attempts at distorting evidence to blame ETA, as they were with their government's involvement in the United States' war in Iraq.
Many counter-terrorism experts believe that the revulsion felt by ordinary Spaniards in the wake of the train bombings made ETA give up the path of armed violence. The other long-running struggle for independence waged in Europe, by the Irish Republican Army (IRA), had also ended with the Irish guerillas negotiating a peace agreement. The "Good Friday" agreement of April 1998 that brought peace to Northern Ireland had an impact on the Basque consciousness. A few months after that, ETA signed a short-lived ceasefire agreement with the Aznar government.
Gerry Adams, the leader of Sinn Fein, the political wing of the IRA, has told the British authorities that he along with other leaders of his party advised the Basques on the tactics to be adopted while negotiating with Spain. Adams said that Sinn Fein had been trying to help ETA restart peace talks after the collapse of the 1998 truce.
During the long years of General Franco's authoritarian rule, even speaking Basque in public places was considered a crime. One of ETA's spectacular acts against Franco's regime was the 1973 car-bombing of Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco, Franco's Prime Minister and heir-apparent.
In the 1970s, ETA killed 100 people on an average every year. Prominent members of the security services and judges and politicians were targeted. In the last couple of years, ETA-sponsored violence has come down dramatically. Before the announcement of the latest ceasefire, a few bombs exploded in Spanish towns but they did not cause much damage to people or property. Spanish and French authorities have coordinated their anti-insurgency tactics and eliminated or arrested many of ETA's top leaders and activists.
The Spanish government's secret paramilitary group, Anti-Terrorist Liberation Groups (GAL), conducted a "dirty war" against ETA. Many innocent people were killed in the operations by GAL. In the early 1990s, the top leadership of ETA was caught in France.
The new leader of the Conservative Party, Mariano Rajoy, is also continuing with the hard-line posture of his predecessor on Basque separatism. He was quick to express scepticism about ETA's intentions after the announcement of a "permanent ceasefire". He now opposes all "negotiations with terrorists", forgetting the 1998 ceasefire agreement the Conservative government had signed with ETA. That agreement broke down in late 1999 as the government refused to talk about a meaningful decentralisation of power. ETA then restarted its bombing campaign.
In December 2001, the European Union declared ETA a "terrorist organisation". In March 2003, the Spanish Supreme Court banned Herri Batasuna, the political counterpart of ETA. The party used to attract 10-20 per cent of the Basque vote. It is expected to play a key role in the politics of the region once the ban is lifted. The Basque regional Premier, Juan Jose Ibarretxe, who belongs to the Basque Nationalist Party, had proposed to the Central government last year that the Basque government should become a "freely associated" part of Spain. The proposal was rejected by the Spanish Parliament.
The Spanish Prime Minister said that for the peace process to be more effective, the support of the main Opposition party was essential. The Basques are no doubt hoping for at least some meaningful concessions this time around. Otherwise there is danger of a return of violence and terrorism.
Saturday, April 01, 2006
Barrena and de Brun
Spokesman for outlawed Basque pro-independence party Batasuna Pernando Barrena (L) chats with Sinn Fein politician Bairbre de Brun after a demonstration in Bilbao, Spain April 1, 2006. Armed separatists ETA declared a permanent ceasefire on March 23. REUTERS/Vincent West

