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Spain: Zapatero continues Aznars anti-democratic measures
in regions
By Paul Bond
28 May 2004
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When Marchs general election swept the right-wing Popular
Party (PP) government of Jose Maria Aznar from power, the incoming
social democratic government of Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was
given a cautious welcome by nationalist and regionalist parties
in Spains 17 autonomous regions.
One of his first moves after the PSOE (Socialist Workers Party
of Spain) took office, for example, was to telephone Basque lehendakari
(regional premier) Juan Jose Ibarretxe to resume political relations.
Ibarretxe had not spoken to Aznar for two years. Zapatero has
also agreed that parliament should discuss the regions annually
(there has not been such a debate since 1997). Zapatero has, though,
shown a determination to sustain elements of Aznars policiesparticularly
towards the Basquessuggesting that relations are likely
to worsen.
Immediately after the election, the Stalinist-dominated United
Left (Izquierda Unida or IU) signed an accord for political
pluralism with many of the regional parties. At a press
conference to launch the accord, regionalists like the moderate
Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), which heads the regional government,
and the Galician National Bloc (BNG), welcomed an end to the steamrolling
and authoritarianism of the Aznar government. In a separate
statement, the PNV hailed an end to the PPs policy
of confrontation, division and no dialogue.
It was quickly apparent what the nationalist organisations
hoped to win from the incoming government. Three of the left
nationalist parties (the Basque Eusko Alkartasuna, Aragons
Chunta Aragonesista and the Catalan Republican Left) issued an
open letter calling for changes in national plurality, cultural
and language policy. This was to be achieved through greater development
of the countrys federal structure, that is, greater regional
devolution of powers.
The regional parties have as their goal the establishment of
direct negotiating rights with transnational corporations and
the European Union. During the negotiations over making up the
additional votes required to give Zapatero a clear majority for
election as prime minister, many of the regional parties made
this clear. The Canary Islands Coalition deputies, for example,
announced that they would make their decision on the basis of
Zapateros assurances on EU subsidies. In Galicia, even the
PPs own regional politicians were seeking the right to direct
negotiation of fishing deals with the EU.
The PP government nationally sought to use regional tensions
as an excuse for repressive legislation to clamp down on all domestic
dissent. Aznar regarded demands for greater regional autonomy
as treasonable. Legislation was recently introduced making it
a criminal offence to hold a referendum on extending autonomous
rights without prior approval from the national government. This
legislation applies to all the regions, but in practice it was
intended to suppress proposals by Ibarretxe aimed at extending
fiscal and political autonomy in the Basque region. Aznar made
eager use of the war against terror against the Basque
separatist organisation ETA (Euskadi ta Askatasuna or Basque Homeland
and Freedom), and exploited ETAs terrorist campaign to justify
suppressing domestic dissent. The parliamentary Basque separatist
party Batasuna, accused of links to ETA, became the first party
to be banned since the end of General Francos military dictatorship.
In opposition, the PSOE was prepared to countenance some extension
of autonomous rights within the framework of the Spanish state,
for some regions. The PSOE nationally was reasonably sympathetic
to such an extension of autonomy in Catalonia, for example, where
its regional sister party, the PSC, entered a coalition government
with the Catalan Republican Left (ERC). The PSOE took a more critical
position on Basque regionalism, however, although its support
for reform of the Catalan statute had been an important factor
in further encouraging Basque separatist tendencies. Whilst prepared
to discuss amendments to the present constitution, the PSOE was
hostile to the wholesale reforms of regional autonomy being proposed
by Ibarretxe.
The Basque regional government refused to withdraw Ibarretxes
plan when the PSOEs regional sister party, the PSE, proposed
a new negotiating process along the lines of the Catalan model.
A regional spokeswoman demanded to know what had changed: Why
should we withdraw the plan? ... Just because the Socialists won
the election? She also demanded to know if the PSE would
recognise Euskadi (the region identified as the Basque country)
as a nation or not.
The PNV made clear its intentions to push the matter through
the regional parliament. The PNVs Antonio Rubalkaba, head
of the commission involved, ignored the parliamentary ruling that
only one vote was allowed on the whole plan. Instead, to increase
the likelihood of the plan being accepted, he agreed to votes
being cast on each amendment and shouted down opposition.
Upon the announcement of Zapateros victory, the PNV pointed
to the PSOEs years of loyal support for the PP government,
saying that this would be a legacy that would not disappear overnight.
The clearest example of this was the Anti-Terrorist Pact in 2000.
In signing up to the pact, which was aimed at ETA, the PSOE endorsed
the PPs suppression of democratic rights in the Basque region.
After the election, the PNV cited the pact specifically as an
agreement that would need to be overturned. They said the serious
curbs on freedom it had created would need to be reversed.
The PSOEs immediate response was that nothing would change.
It has now gone further, and brought the PP into discussions to
reinforce its maintenance of the pact. The meeting was the first
since the creation of the pact to be attended by the head of the
government. A PSOE spokesman said the meeting served to
reinforce the unity of the principal parties against terrorism.
At the meeting criticisms of the previous government made by
Interior Minister Jose Antonio Alonso were withdrawn. Alonso had
suggested that lack of political foresight by the
PP may have contributed to the March 11 terror bombings in Madrid.
Attempts by the PP government to deny the possibility of al-Qaeda
involvement in the bombings, and pin responsibility on ETA, became
the focus of the popular upsurge of hostility that swept the PP
from office.
The PPs leader Mariano Rajoy has promised his party will
remain loyal to the pact. The parties have agreed
to meet every six months on this issue, or whenever either party
has a request to analyse new developments.
Although the pact now addresses the possibility of al-Qaeda
attacks, it was stressed that it relates to the terrorist threat
both foreign and domestic. The Basque regional government has
noted that the pacts preamble refers more often to the PNV
and EA than it does to ETA. ETA is at its weakest point for many
years.
While Zapatero made clear his refusal to discuss with ETA,
a forum of nationalist parties, including representatives of Batasuna,
called for the creation of a committee to discuss peace. The forum
did not call for a ceasefire, but ETA has not been active since
the bombings in Madrid. Recent press reports suggest that there
have been discussions around the Ibarretxe plan. Publicly ETA
has dismissed the plan, which does not allow for independence,
although there are unconfirmed reports that sections of the organisation
favour a deal with parliamentary nationalists.
Zapatero has also been able to win support for the extradition
of ETA suspects from countries that had hitherto refused. After
Zapatero met with Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, the Belgian
authorities agreed to extradite Jon Lopez Gomez and Diego Ugarte
Lopez de Arkaute, arrested in Bossu in March. Belgian courts also
agreed to reopen the cases of Luis Moreno and Raquel Garcia, who
have been living in Belgium since the early 1990s. The Belgian
appeals court ruled in March that the Spanish had provided insufficient
evidence to merit extradition, but the cases have now been reopened.
The agreement on the pact has also allowed the two parties
to reach an accord on continuing other aspects of Aznars
policy regarding regional matters. The PP had pursued Batasuna
and its members through the courts, banning offspring parties
as soon as they appeared. The meeting between Zapatero and Rajoy
also saw them agree to ban a new party, Herritaren Zerrenda (HZ),
from standing in the European elections. Accused of being controlled
by Batasuna, HZ has been annulled by the Supreme Court.
HZ was launched as a direct appeal to the European Union, in
whose revised constitution HZ, like many other regional parties
across Spain, sees its future. We believe that the coming
elections offer us an opportunity ... to show Europe that Euskal
Herria [the Basque country] is a European nation, HZs
statement said. It spoke of reinforcing the national plan,
but made clear that the independent Basque region was seen as
part of a European trading bloc. [T]he model for the building
of the new European Union will condition the future of Euskal
Herria.
Acting on the governments appeal, the Supreme Court initially
withheld the voters list from HZon suspicion that
it was a terrorist organisation. (Rajoy said after his meeting
with Zapatero that Batasuna was a terrorist organisation, and
pointed by way of evidence to the support Aznar was able to win
for this position from the EU and the United States).
The Supreme Court then ruled that HZ was run by Batasuna on
the basis of, among other things, the collection of signatures
required by law for participation in the election. (HZ collected
some 49,000 signatures in the Spanish Basque region). This is
a continuation of the suppression of democratic rights begun by
the Aznar government, in denying a parliamentary voice to some
10 percent of the regional population.
HZ is calling upon its supporters to vote using ballot papers
from across the border in France. (When Batasuna was first banned,
its supporters voted using home-made ballot papers).
See Also:
Spain: Socialist Party government attacks
free speech
[25 May 2004]
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