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Spanish government moves to ban Basque separatist party
By Vicky Short
17 August 2002
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The Basque separatist group, ETA, has threatened reprisals
against Spanish MPs who vote to ban Herri Batasuna, the organisations
political wing. The proposal to declare Herri Batasuna illegal
comes after a series of terrorist outrages.
A bomb killed two people on August 4 in Santa Pola in the southeastern
Spanish province of Alicante. Santa Pola is a tourist town of
20,000 inhabitants that increases to 200,000 during the summer
months. The dead were a 57-year-old man and a six-year-old girl.
The explosion took place next to the Civil Guards barracks at
a busy crossroads, near a bus stop.
A Ford Escort thought to contain about 40 kilos of dynamite
was parked on a road annexed to the barracks, which are located
in a working class area. There was no warning. Over 34 people
were injured and damage to adjacent buildings was extensive. About
250 dwellings were affected and hundreds of people had to be evacuated
and given shelter in neighbouring halls.
The six-year-old girl was the daughter of one of the Civil
Guards, who was playing in a room inside the barracks. Thousands
of people demonstrated their opposition to the bombing during
the funeral of the two victims.
A further explosion took place on August 9 at 2.00pm in a hamburger
restaurant in the tourist town of Torrevieja in the same area
and another bomb is being sought in Santa Pola, after an anonymous
caller telephoned a newspaper informing that bombs were buried
in the sand on the beach. The Torrevieja explosion did not cause
injuries, but extensive damage to buildings.
ETA (Euskadi Ta AskatasunaBasque Homeland and Freedom)
has conducted a campaign to disrupt tourism during the summer
holidays in the last few years. The direct beneficiaries of such
actions are the right wing Peoples Party (PP) government
of Jose Maria Aznar. Since passing the new Ley de Partidos
(Law of Parties), which allows for the banning of any party that
directly or indirectly condones terrorism or sympathises with
a terrorist organisation, the Aznar government has been actively
pursuing the criminalisation of Herri Batasuna (Peoples
Unity). The recent bombings have given Aznar the ammunition to
mobilise support for the banning and silencing of those who have
expressed concern about the extent and vagueness of the new legislation,
as well as the way in which it became law. The implementation
of the new law in the case of Batasuna will open the gates for
what is one of the most far-reaching attacks on democratic rights
since the end of the Franco era.
As soon as the first bomb in Santa Pola went off, the government
insisted on Batasunas unconditional condemnation of ETA.
Together with the Basque socialists (PSE) and the Socialist Party
(PSOE), the government demanded that resolutions be debated in
every council in the Basque Country so that note could be
taken of Batasunas vote. After Batasuna abstained
or absented itself from these debates, the PP stated that not
to condemn the bombing was a clear reason for imposing
a ban. After doubts had been expressed as to the wisdom of applying
the law so blatantly, Minister Mariano Rajoy announced that the
government had asked the Ministry of Justice for judicial
reports to determine if Batasunas non-condemnation
would be sufficient reason to request the partys illegalisation.
Later it was announced, after an agreement between the PP and
the PSOE, that the Congress of Deputies would break the holiday
recess to vote on the banning of Batasuna at a debate on August
26.
This is not the first attempt to ban a legal political party.
The most recent was in December 1997, when the Spanish Supreme
Court declared that all 23 members of the National Board of Batasunas
predecessor were guilty of collaborating with an armed terrorist
group. This was because they distributed a video that showed members
of ETA discussing a peace proposal. They were sentenced to seven
years in prison. Their newspaper was closed and the organisation
disbanded.
Batasuna is not the only target of the new law, which states
the reason for banning a party in the vaguest of termsto
justify or exonerate the outrages or to give express
or tacit support to terrorism and to exonerate or
minimise its significance.
Mounting discontent with the government among the Spanish people
is developing over unemployment, casual and temporary work, falling
wages and conditions, cuts in social services, reforms to undermine
health and education services, price increases resulting from
the conversion to the euro, corporate and government corruption,
militarism and the drive to war. ETA is indifferent to such issues,
however. The indiscriminate bombings and killings of innocent
people, which are an attempt to force the government to negotiate
better terms for the Basque bourgeoisie, only serve to unite the
Spanish working class with its own enemies.
The funeral for the two victims killed in Santa Pola became
a show of force for the rightwing and a demonstration of the collusion
between the government, the social democrats, the nationalists,
the church and the police. The funeral procession was headed by
Aznar, accompanied by the ministers of the interior, labour and
defence, the president of the Valencia Generalitat and members
of its autonomous government. Three members of the federal leadership
of the PSOE, as well as the secretary general of the Valencia
PSOE attended the function. The Basque government sent two of
its representatives from the health and justice ministries.
The Bishop of Orihuela-Alicante, Victorio Oliver, spoke and
read out a message from the Pope. The king, queen and prince also
sent messages of condolence. Thousands of ordinary people opposed
to the killing of innocent people joined in demanding justice
from the prime minister. More demonstrations were held in other
parts of Spain.
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