Wednesday, June 27, 2007

In The Mean Time in Scotland

Things are moving in Scotland and The Nassau Guardian has published an article with a bleak outlook, here you have it:

Scotland: The road to nowhere

Gwynne Dyer

On Thursday, 4 May, the Scottish National Party, which promises to hold a referendum on independence by 2010, won the largest number of seats in the election for the Scottish Parliament. It's the first time that Labour has lost an election in Scotland in over fifty years, and the first time ever that the Scottish separatists are in a position to lead a government. So why does this not feel even a bit momentous?

One reason is that Alex Salmond, the leader of the Scottish National Party, will have to form a coalition government. The SNP won 47 seats to Labour's 46, but for a majority in the Parliament in Edinburgh it needs 65. Its most likely partner is the Liberal Democratic Party, which won 16 seats. Add a couple of Greens and one "independent" who is actually a former deputy leader of the SNP, and he can probably reach the magic number -- but the Liberal Democrats are dead set against a referendum on independence.

Salmond will probably yield gracefully and postpone a referendum on independence until a second term, because he knows that the Nationalists cannot win a referendum now.

The SNP got more votes this time because Scots wanted to punish the Labour Party, which had been in power long enough to wear out its welcome, but popular support for actual independence for Scotland has been stuck at around 25 percent for the past thirty years.

What Salmond and the SNP really need is a long period in office when they can pick fights with the British government on issues where they will look like defenders of Scottish rights. The SNP's programme for the "first hundred days" is rich in symbolic demands of that sort: "repatriation" of North Sea oil revenues (i.e. all for Scotland, none for England); a separate Scottish Olympic team; Scottish control over British negotiations with the European Union on fisheries issues, and so on.

But even that strategy won't get very far, because the SNP's prospective coalition partners will not want perpetual confrontations with London.

The SNP is now beginning the same long and thankless process that the separatist Parti Quebecois entered when it won its first election in Quebec in 1976.

Quebec is the right analogy, because in both cases "independence" is mainly of emotional importance -- and the emotion is not all that powerful. Basque separatists in Spain, Kurds in Turkey, and Tamils in Sri Lanka have bitter memories of mistreatment and repression by the majority nationality in relatively recent times, but for French-Canadians and Scots it is mainly a legacy issue.

The basic argument of separatists in both of these places is that history took the wrong turn a few hundred years ago. Even if things are comfortable at the moment, it is our duty to make the history come out right at last. But things ARE pretty comfortable: Scots already control most domestic issues in Scotland through their own parliament, as does the French-speaking majority in the province of Quebec. GDP per capita in Scotland is 95 percent of the average figure for all of Britain, the same as Quebec's in relation to the rest of Canada.

No doubt an independent Scotland or an independent Quebec would do well economically, but they're doing well economically now. Do they really need to go through all the political turbulence and economic uncertainty of creating an independent state, in order to end up not very far from where they are now? In Quebec, the answer has always been no.

The Parti Quebecois was in power in Quebec for most of the past thirty years, but it only twice dared to call a referendum on independence, and both times it lost. Like the PQ versus the Liberals in Quebec, the SNP may establish itself as the only practical alternative to Labour in Scotland.

It may form the government there for most of the next thirty years. But even that would not mean that it will ever achieve its objective of independence.

After a generation of futile effort to convince Quebecers to vote for independence, the Parti Quebecois tumbled to third-party status in last March's Quebec election. The SNP is riding high at the moment, but the same fate may await it further down the road, because the majority response to its grand project is likely to be: why bother?

There is one big difference, however.

A majority of English-Canadians always wanted to keep francophone Quebec within the country, and were willing to make major economic and political concessions to persuade French-Canadians to stay. Whereas 59 percent of English people, according to a recent opinion poll, are in favour of Scottish independence -- more than twice the proportion of Scots who are.

The numbers are suspect: ask a slightly different question, and you'd get a quite different answer. The English aren't actually eager to push Scotland out of the Union.

But it is true that most English people would hardly notice if the northernmost bit of Britain, containing less than a tenth of the country's population, became a separate country. After all, it would still be in the European Union, so what's the difference?


With the last question the author tells us that it's missing the big picture. It is not what the English think or feel about the situation, is what the Scottish want for themselves. It also proves the little understanding that many have regarding the longing for self determination of those who feel history has short changed them, like the Scottish, the Welsh, the Basques, the Catalans, the Corsicans, to mention some.

If the dominating states don't even bother or do not see a difference, why don't they give up their former colonies once and for all?

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Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Gernika

This article you're about to read was published at Sawf News:

Basque museum to showcase Hiroshima, Nagasaki exhibition

Posted on martes, 26 de junio de 2007 (EST)

Japan's ambassador to Spain is to open an exhibition on the aftermath of the August 1945 atomic blasts in Hiroshima and Nagasaki at a museum in Spain's Basque region, organisers told AFP on Tuesday.

MADRID (AFP) - Motohide Yoshikawa will attend the opening the temporary exhibition for its launch at the Guernica Peace Museum in the Basque region on Wednesday.

"Hiroshima-Nagasaki: Effects of the Atomic Bomb" was jointly organised by the museum and UNESCO, the United Nation's cultural and educational body. The exhibition will run until September 9.

The Hiroshima and Nagasaki exhibition, which includes testimony from survivors, is the brainchild of the Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall.

The organisers said the exhibition said the idea was to "remind future generations of what happened in Hiroshima and Nagasaki (and offer) a homage to the need for eternal peace and truth."

In 1945, in the dying days of World War II, US air force bombers dropped atomic bombs that devastated the southern Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The bombings, on August 6 and 9 respectively, killed more than 200,000 people and injured untold thousands more.

Guernica's hosting of the exhibition, which comprises some 40 graphic images of the aftermath of the attacks, is loaded with political significance.

The Basque city itself suffered devastating bombing at the hands of German planes in an attack on April 26, 1937 during the Spanish Civil War.

Artist Pablo Picasso created an iconic painting representing the horror of the attack, which is on display in Madrid at the Reina Sofia museum.

It is the third time the works have traveled outside Japan having been shown in Chicago in 2005 and Las Vegas last year.

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Monday, June 25, 2007

Spanish Government Foiled Peace Accord

Like I said, the Spanish political class is full of spineless cowards. First they torpedoed the peace negotiations, now they deny how close they were to clinching a commitment to disarm by ETA. People need to know this so they can finally learn which side prefers violence over peaceful coexistence.

This article was published at EITb:

Government denies contacts, Gara daily offers more details

According to the Basque daily the socialitst party PSOE "rejected a political agreement after the armed group committed to dismantle its military structures as consequence of the process."

Spokesman of socialist group in Spain's Chamber of Deputies, Diego Lopez Garrido, maintained Sunday "it is obvious Spanish government have had no kind of political agreement with the armed group."

During a press conference, Garrido denied what Gara newspaper has been publishing during the last days about meetings, contacts and agreements between Spanish Government, the armed group ETA, socialist party PSOE and outlawed Basque party Batasuna.

According to Gara's Sunday edition, last May 21 took place "the definitive meeting" for a resolution process, a meeting in which "only participated delegations of PSOE and Batasuna. The first rejected the proposal of a political agreement."

The Basque newspaper unveiled ETA would have stopped its armed struggle and dismantle its military structures, if they reached a global commitment and brought the process to its end.

Garrido insisted that "a political agreement would never be accepted with a group of criminals and terrorists." This kind of information comes from "the terrorist milieu, who lack all credibility." Spanish Government’s position was clear, he added.


How about that last sentence, sounds to me like he is talking about the government that he represents.

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Txalaparta Around the World

The article you are about to read reminded me of the project Mundua 'ta Musika by my friend José Santancara, here you have it, comes to us via EITb:

Basque film Nomadak TX succeed on the world stage

The film Nomadak TX, in which Martinez and Otxoa turn the traditional Basque instrument txalaparta into a medium for cross-cultural exchange, was screened at Silverdocs as the Music Documentary Award winner.

After its success at several international festivals (Seattle, Nantucket, San Sebastian-Donostia, Guadalajara, Amsterdam, Belfast,...), the Basque film Nomadak TX, directed by Raul de la Fuente, was screened at AFI Silverdocs as the Music Documentary Award winner.

The AFI Silver Theatre hosted from June 12-17 the international film festival Silverdocs, a competition founded by the American Film Institute and The Discovery Channel.

The fifth edition of the festival screened 100 documentary feature films and shorts from a variety of countries and filmmakers. The Silverdocs Music Documentary Award was presented to Nomadak TX.

The film tells the story of a trip Basque musicians Harkaitz Martínez and Igor Otxoa, members of Oreka Tx, made through India, Lapland, Mongolia and the Sahara desert, a trip in search of the world’s last remaining nomadic tribes.

Traveling around the world, they perform for native peoples and nomadic tribes, bringing their singular music to other cultures. Otxoa and Martinez use the traditional Basque instrument, the txalaparta (similar to a xylophone), as a medium for cross-cultural exchange and understanding, turning it into a meetingplace for people and different cultures.

As Silverdocs points out on its web site, "the film captures an extraordinarily fluent and dynamic conversation across borders and languages, articulated through music. Through encounters with other musicians—a Mongol musician and a Hindu taxi driver, a Sami singer and an aging Saharan lady—the txalaparta becomes more than a musical instrument; it is a tool for communication in which everyone expresses their desires."

"Stunning photography and superb music fill nearly every frame of the film, culminating in an amazing performance piece involving the music of all tribes in unison with the txalaparta. With little dialogue, the film speaks volumes on the significance of music in our lives, and its power to connect people all over the world."

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Saturday, June 23, 2007

Video : Kilometroak 2007

Thanks to You Tube I present to all of you the video made as part of the publicity campaign for this year's edition of Kilometroak:



If you wish to learn more information about this important initiative, please follow the link to Kilometroak's web page.

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Saturday, June 16, 2007

Euskal Herria: New Town Councils

So, the betrayal by the PSOE to the people of Nafarroa has now taken place. Despite the sour exchange between the leaders of the pseudo-socialist party with Mariano Rajoy and his thugs at the PP, the PSOE decide to present the fascist Yolanda Barcina with the chance to be reelected to office in Iruñea. This backwards political move by the PSOE demonstrates just how deep the hatred towards the Basque people runs in Madrid.

Here you have a note by EITB regarding the setting up of new town councils in the peninsular portion of Euskal Herria:

Politics

Town and city councils

Basque Country, Navarre set up new town councils

06/16/2007

Iñaki Azkuna (PNV), Odón Elorza (PSE) and Yolanda Barcina (UPN) took office again in Bilbao, Donostia and Iruña respectively. In Gasteiz, socialist Patxi Lazcoz snatched mayor's office from conservative Alfonso Alonso.

Citizens from the Basque Country and Navarre elected their town councillors and county councillors on May 27. Today, June 16, town councils were constituted.

Apart from a few exceptions, the mayor's office went to the one who got most ballots, as only a few previous agreements had been reached. Most of the mayors will have to negotiate with other political parties during the coming term of office as they have no majority.

The Basque leftwing nationalist movement gathered in front of the town halls to manifest against the banning of ANV's candidates. Five people were arrested.

Alava

Patxi Lazkoz (socialist party PSE-EE) was the most voted candidate in local elections in Vitoria-Gasteiz. He was elected new mayor during the constituent session of the town council that started at 10:00.

Bizkaia

In Bilbao, Iñaki Azkuna (Basque Nationalist Party PNV) reached an agreement with communist Ezker Batua. The constituent session took place at 11:00.

In Bizkaia, the tripartite (PNV, EA and EB) and socialist PSE-EE agreed to respect the most voted candidates. By consequence, PNV took Getxo's mayor's office, whereas PSE-EE took Sestao's mayor's office.

Gipuzkoa

In the Basque town of Donostia-San Sebastian, mayor Odon Elorza was the most voted candidate. He could count on the coalition of Ezker Batua-Aralar for backing his government.

Navarre

The constituent session of Pamplona/Iruña's town council started at 12:00. The candidate of conservative Union of Navarran People UPN, Yolanda Barcina, has been re-elected mayor as the Socialist Party of Navarre PSN announced on Monday they won't support the candidate of the Basque nationalist coalition Nafarroa Bai to take Pamplona/Iruña’s mayor’s office.

PSN's board said they won't accept any ANV vote and won't support any candidate that depends on the support of ANV.

PSN, Nafarroa Bai and communist Izquierda Unida de Navarra reached an agreement to create a coalition in six towns of Navarre, Barañain, Burlada, Zizur Mayor/Zizur Nagusia, Villava/Atarrabia, Alsasua and Olite. Nafarroa Bai took mayor's office in Barañain, Zizur Mayor/Zizur Nagusia, Villava/Atarrabia and Alsasua, whereas PSN took office in Burlada, Olite y Ansoain.

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Bilbao : Fight for Survival


San Mamés
Originally uploaded by kimiborracho
This is it, Athletic de Bilbao goes for all or nothing in this what very well could be their last game at the top soccer division in Spain.

I know a couple of friends that will be unable to get some sleep tonight. Some of them root for Real Sociedad, some for Athletic. The best of lucks to all of them.

Here you have a note that appeared at Covers, the title is scary enough, although mistakenly the author forgets that Osasuna is also a Basque team, here you have it:

La Liga
Saturday, Jun 16, 2007

La Liga back to one Basque team?

By Associated Press

MADRID, Spain -- It's been 40 years since the Spanish league fielded a single Basque team.

Come Sunday, it could be time again.

Athletic Bilbao and Real Sociedad are involved in the "other" great fight that comes with every league title race: Avoiding the drop.

Pamplona-based club Osasuna, which reached the UEFA Cup semifinals this season, sits mid-table and will go into next season with a European qualifying place on its mind.

But Athletic and Sociedad - as well as Real Betis and Celta Vigo - are fighting to be one of the two clubs to stay up after Sunday's final round of league matches.

Betis and Athletic have 37 points, Celta 36, and Sociedad 34. Last-place Gimnastic Tarragona, which has 28, has already been relegated.

The stakes will be highest for Athletic when it hosts Levante at San Mames Stadium on Sunday. Bilbao are 1/3 with Levante at 15/2.

Winner of eight league crowns, Athletic is one of only three clubs to have never dropped out of the topflight in its 109-year history. The others are Real Madrid and FC Barcelona.

The Rojiblancos, who escaped relegation last season by winning their final two games, host Levante.

"Athletic will get the result it needs," club president Ana Urquijo said. "It's an important game and we'll face it like we've faced others in difficult moments."

Athletic was built on the "cantera," a club policy of recruiting only Basque players that has been the base of team selection since 1912.

The "cantera" has spawned players such as Rafael Moreno Aranzadi - who's nickname "Pichichi" is used on the award given to the league's top goalscorer - and 89 Spain internationals, including striker Talmo Zarra, who set the league record with 38 goals in one season.

Since the domestic double winning season of 1984, Athletic has managed five top-five finishes.

"Your new Atheltic," a party nominated for next month's presidential elections, wants the team to be 30 percent foreign.

"Athletic's members are mature and understand that it cannot continue on the same path of little by little getting through poor seasons that are weighed down with hardship," the group said in a statement released on Friday.

A drop to the second division could be costly to Spain's oldest soccer team since it's planning a new 55,000-seat stadium to be ready for 2012.

"The decisive moment has arrived," coach Joseba Etxeberria said. "We know we cannot fail and we will not fail. We can't even think of things going wrong."

Sociedad has a date with Champions League qualifier Valencia at the Mestalla Stadium where it has won only eight times in 58 encounters.

Sociedad holds the tiebreaker advantage in case of a four-way tie at 37 points, with Betis also staying up. In case of a three-way tie, Sociedad is safe too.

Still, the team which challenged Madrid for the league title to the final day four years ago needs help from others to survive its first drop since 1967.

"We're preparing knowing that if we win we have hopes," Sociedad striker Darko Kovacevic said. "We have options, and not a few. It's still very open."

Sociedad fields Basque players along with internationals like Serbia's Kovacevic.

Little investment in last season's squad - which finished one point above relegation - has left the team in the bottom three since the start of the season.


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Barcelona : Identity and Solidarity


Comes from the earth but does not have the weight of a stone…
Originally uploaded by 45street.


It is refreshing to find an article that tells us how the Catalans feel about themselves. All to often the foreign visitor will assume that the official version about Spain and the stateless nations within it is the one to rely on.

Well, Rick Steves gives us a more accurate vision of what it is to visit Barcelona, the vibrant city that is capital to Catalunya.

The note appeared at the Travel section of CNN, here it is:

Barcelona: Leading a stateless nation

POSTED: 10:51 a.m. EDT, June 15, 2007

By Rick Steves
Tribune Media Services

(Tribune Media Services) -- Barcelona is Spain's second city and the capital of the proud and distinct region of Catalonia. With Francisco Franco's fascism now long gone, Catalonia's creative and independent spirit is on a roll. Many visitors find this to be Spain's most cosmopolitan and vibrant corner.

In Barcelona a local told me "Catalonia is Spain's Quebec." Traveling here you see how the people of Catalonia have an affinity for other "stateless nations." Locals don't like to call their corner of Iberia a "region" of Spain -- that's what Franco called it.

They stress that they are a "nation without a state." And they have an affinity for other people who didn't get their independence when they drew the national boundaries. They live in solidarity with other stateless nations, finding Basque or Galician bars a little more appealing than your run-of-the-mill Spanish ones.

Barcelona has a rich history: Roman colony, a Dark Age Visigothic capital, and a 14th-century maritime power. And beyond its great sights, be sure to appreciate the city's elegant sense of style and Mediterranean knack for good living.

The city's main square, Placa Catalunya, is the center of the world for 7 million Catalan people, a lively scene throughout the day. The square is decorated with statues honoring important Catalans. Catalonia has its own distinct language, history, and flag, which locals fly proudly next to Spain's on government buildings and all alone from their apartments.

Catalonia has often been at odds with the central Spanish government in Madrid. Back in the '30s this area was one of the last pockets of resistance against the fascist dictator Francisco Franco. When Franco finally took power he punished the region with four decades of repression. During that time, locals were prohibited from flying their flag. To show their national spirit, they flew the flag of the Barcelona soccer team instead.

Even Barcelona's ATMs are in solidarity with the European family of "Stateless Nations." They offer the correct choice of languages: Along with Angles, Frances, and Castella (Spanish), you'll always find Gallec, Euskera and Catalan. Even though there's likely not a person a year who would speak only Gallec (from Galicia in northwest Spain) or Euskera (from the Basque country), they give them the linguistic respect they would hope for in a foreign land.

Each Sunday Barcelonans gather in front of their cathedral to celebrate their community by dancing the traditional Sardana. Traditional instruments, which evoke the struggle these people have waged through the centuries to keep their culture alive, sound sweet (I think only) to Catalan ears.

The Catalan language is irrevocably tied to the history and spirit of the Catalan people. Since the end of the Franco era in the mid-1970s, the language has enjoyed a huge resurgence. It's the language of the local schools and, today, children here speak Catalan first, Spanish second.

A recent affluence has elevated the city. There's barely a hint of danger in the once frightening Gothic Quarter. I remember the city's main boulevard, the Ramblas, when it was rich at the top and very rough at the port. Lurid prostitutes would line the street where it finally hit the harbor.

Today, the Ramblas is rich at the top and rich at the port and the holes ground by anxious high heels into the stone thresholds of brothel doorways are the only things left of the prostitutes.

The toughest thing surviving on the Ramblas are the roving gangs of thugs who run the high-energy, extremely twitchy shell games. With spotters uphill and downhill, and a full team of shills, nervous men scoot their dodgy peas. It's amazing there are enough fools on the streets to keep them in business.

While souvenir shops and crowds of tourists have diluted the Ramblas' former elegance, it still offers an entertaining place to see the carnival of Barcelona life. But pay attention. Wherever people stop to gawk, pickpockets are at work. I think you're as likely to have your pocket picked in Barcelona, especially here on the Ramblas, as anywhere else in Europe. If you stop for any commotion or spectacle, put your hands in your pockets before someone else does.

And Barcelona offers edible travel thrills, too. Pimiento de Padron (or in Catalan, Pebrots de Padro), lightly fried peppers salted and served piping hot, are a kind of Russian roulette for the taste buds. Eager eaters know that every once in a while you hit a super spicy pepper. Munching through a plate of peppers while watching the paseo filling the street in front of my little table, I was starting to understand the passion people have for this great city.

Rick Steves writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. E-mail him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, Wash. 98020.
© 2007 RICK STEVES, DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Notice that he also refers to the Basques yearn for recognition and statehood for Euskal Herria and the solidarity that the Catalans show towards their "cousins".

Kudos to Mr. Steves for this great piece.

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Thursday, June 14, 2007

Mayo is Clean


Iban Mayo
Originally uploaded by meredithfitz
Good news, Basque rider Iban Mayo has been cleared from the doping scandal.

Now he can go back to getting back into shape, and despite not riding for Euskaltel Euskadi, win a few more medals.

Here you have the note from Yahoo News:

Mayo cleared of doping as UCI probes Petacchi, Piepoli

Thu Jun 14, 3:02 PM ET

Spanish climber Iban Mayo, one of three riders whose urine samples were reported to have shown traces of drugs during the recent Giro d'Italia, has been cleared of doping by the International Cycling Union (UCI) on Thursday.

But cycling's world governing body confirmed that Italian pair Alessandro Petacchi and Leonardo Piepoli were still under investigation.

The Gazzetta dello Sport reported Thursday that the three cyclists returned 'non-negative' tests at the first major Tour of the season, which ran from May 12-June 3.

The paper said sprinter Petacchi and climber Piepoli tested positive for salbutamol, a substance primarily used to treat asthma.

Salbutamol is a banned substance, but riders with asthma may use it to certain levels if they possess a medical certificate.

Mayo was reported to have tested positive for testosterone, the banned male sex hormone which snared Floyd Landis on his way to victory in last year's Tour de France.

But the UCI said in a statement that Mayo, who was tested following his victory on the 19th stage to Terme di Comano, had not breached doping rules.

"The UCI has noted press reports about three purportedly abnormal analysis results linked to the last Giro d'Italia," the UCI said in a statement.

"While regretting the premature publication of this news item, the UCI wishes to clarify the following points.

"No breach of the UCI antidoping rules was committed by the Spanish rider Iban Mayo of the Saunier Duval team.

"A further examination conducted by IRMS has enabled any possibility of testosterone administration to be ruled out.

"This further analysis was requested by the UCI following the notification by the Rome laboratory of a T/E value in excess of the norm laid down in the rules; that finding made further examinations necessary.

"The history of this particular case shows the vital need to await the closure of the relevant investigations before reaching conclusions.

"In the other cases, the analyses requested by the UCI are still in progress."

Petacchi, who won the Milan-San Remo classic in 2005 and four stages at the Tour De France in 2003, rides for Milram while Piepoli rides for Saunier Duval. The Italian sprinter also won five stages on this year's Giro.

According to the Gazzetta, neither team was informed of the positive tests by the UCI.

Saunier team manager Mauro Gianetti was left confused about the fate of his two cyclists.

"I called the UCI and they said to me 'If you haven't heard any news, it's because there isn't any.' This is absurd," he said.

Piepoli reacted to the news prior to the start of the Dauphine Libere's fourth stage in France, saying: "It's true that I take salbutamol to treat my allergy.

"Mauro (Gianetti) asked me how much I had taken. But I don't know how many puffs I took. I take it each time I need it. It depends on the seasons."

The Gazzetta reported that further examination of the three urine samples were being carried out at a laboratory in Rome, and that they may be taken to Barcelona, Spain for more tests.

In his prime as part of the Basque Euskaltel team, the 29-year-old Mayo was one of the few riders capable of challenging the dominance of Lance Armstrong and Jan Ullrich on the Tour de France mountain stages.

He won the stage to Alpe d'Huez in 2003, and won the Dauphine Libere stage race, an important build-up to the Tour, in 2004.


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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Zapatero Retaliates in Mexico

Upset because he has been exposed as a lame politician, a man bent on perpetuating the colonialist occupation of a nation that cries for freedom, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has demanded from his allies to start punishing Basque citizens no matter where they are.

This is why Mexico deported Andoni Azpiazu Alcelay, a week after the ETA said it was ending a 15-month ceasefire in which Spain did absolutely nothing to negotiate a peaceful resolution of the political conflict that pits Spain against Euskal Herria.

Migration authorities found Andoni Azpiazu Alcelay in the city of Cuernavaca, thanks to an anonymous tip, and expelled him because he lacked a visa, Mexico's government said.

ETA, which has been fighting for an independent Basque state in northern Spain and southwestern France for four decades, said last week it was abandoning a ceasefire it had declared in March 2006.

The government of Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero started exploratory peace talks in mid-2006, but broke them off at the end of the year after ETA detonated a bomb at Madrid's airport in December after Zapatero arrested ETA's envoys to the peace negotiations in clear violation to international treaties.

In 2006, Mexico extradited six people to Spain for suspected links to ETA after a three-year legal battle in which Spain failed to produce a single piece of evidence to support its outlandish accusations.

In the mid-1990s, Mexico signed a extradition treaty with Spain in which it ceased to treat suspected terrorists as political refugees in clear violation with Mexico's Constitution and the country's hard earned recognition in the international community as a safe haven for those who are escaping ethnic, religious or political persecution. But Spain is taking advantage of its position as a trade mediator between Mexico and the European Community, demanding Basque citizens in return for their support.

Zapatero is exporting Spain's brand of repression against the Basque people as a result of his refusal to sit down with the Basque political forces to seek a peaceful end to the occupation of Euskal Herria in its peninsular portion. He is no different from Milosevic.

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