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Spain: Arrests of Batasuna leadership by Socialist Party ahead
of elections
By Paul Bond
25 October 2007
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With the arrest earlier this month of most of the leadership
of the Basque separatist party Batasuna, the Socialist Workers
Party (PSOE) government of José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero
has made a clear pitch for a right-wing vote ahead of next years
election.
The arrests signal a major assault on democratic rights. The
PSOE came to power in 2003 amidst a wave of hostility to their
predecessors in government, the right-wing Popular Party (PP).
Since then they have worked to reassure the PPs supporters
and Spainich and international capital by adopting the very policies
which they were elected in order to oppose. The PP, which has
been critical of Zapateros handling of Basque separatism,
has welcomed these arrests.
Twenty-three members of Batasunas leadership were arrested
at a meeting in Segura, in the Basque region. Seventeen of them
have been jailed, along with another two who were detained subsequently
and jailed without bail. All 19 have been provisionally charged
with membership of an armed group. The arrests were authorised
by leading Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon as part of an investigation
into allegations that Batasuna, which calls for an independent
Basque state, was bankrolling the armed separatist group ETA.
At the same time there were more than 15 house-to-house searches
across the region. In San Sebastian the headquarters of two other
parties, the Communist Party of the Basque Lands and Basque Nationalist
Action, were also searched. Both parties are represented in the
regional assembly. The pretext for raiding them appears to have
been allegations that they are front organisations for Batasuna.
Their ministers walked out of the assembly in protest at the raid.
Garzon, who is well-known for his high-profile role in anti-terror
prosecutions, led moves five years ago to proscribe Batasuna for
being a front for ETA. Batasuna was banned in 2003. This marked
the first time since the end of the dictatorship of General Franco
that a party had been banned by the Spanish state. It effectively
disenfranchised the 15 percent of the Basque electorate who voted
for them.
Throughout the intervening period, Batasuna and other Basque
nationalist parties have continued to seek accommodation from
Zapatero for further extensions of their regional autonomy.
Their model is the peace process in Northern Ireland, which
sought to end armed conflict in order to secure favourable conditions
for inward investment by international corporations. Under the
agreements reached with Sinn Fein and the IRA, republicans agreed
to accept British rule in return for a place at the table. The
arrangements served to keep the working class of the region divided
within new state mechanisms based on community representation
through power-sharing between designated Protestants/Unionist
and Catholic/Irish republican parties.
Similarly, the Basque nationalists are seeking greater control
over one of Spains wealthier regions with a view to securing
international investment. Any profits to be made would be restricted
to a tiny layer of the regions middle class, and could only
be achieved on the back of increased exploitation of Basque working
people divided from the working class in the rest of Spain. Their
ultimate ambition is a new capitalist mini-state.
Last year ETA for the first time declared a permanent
ceasefire in the hope that they could obtain a place at the negotiating
table with Zapatero. This did not happen. Frustrated at their
lack of headway, they called off the 15-month ceasefire earlier
this year and resumed terror bombings.
The last four months have witnessed a state crackdown on Basque
separatists. During the summer Batasunas leader Arnaldo
Otegi was arrested on charges of glorifying terrorism.
Last year he was sentenced for allegedly slandering the king.
Virtually the whole of Batasunas leadership has now been
rounded up, including the partys main spokesman since Otegis
arrest, Joseba Permach.
The police stated that the Segura meeting was to pass control
of the party from the old guard to a younger leadership. Judicial
sources have indicated that the meeting was about deciding a new
strategic line for Batasuna following the end of the ETA ceasefire.
The partys remaining spokesmen have denounced the arrests.
Pernando Barrena, the most senior party member still at liberty,
accused the PSOE of pursuing revenge for the firm
line Batasuna had taken during negotiations last year. Barrena,
who was in Pamplona at the time of the raid, denounced the arrests
as kidnappings. He accused the PSOE of attempting
to bolster its position before Marchs election.
Attorney General Candido Conde Pumpido indicated the governments
enthusiasm for such actions. Telling a radio station that some
of the arrested were accused of co-operating with an armed group,
he said that These activities cannot be tolerated, so if
the police find out about them ... it seems prudent that they
be ordered to intervene.
The actions of the PSOE foster nationalist sentiments on both
sides. Basque nationalists use such actions to promote their regionalist
programme, while the PP uses them to justify repression by the
iron state.
Zapateros government had been heavily criticised by the
PP for its attempts to negotiate a settlement in the Basque region.
Their predecessors in power, the PP administration of José
Maria Aznar, had used the Basque region as a test-bed for anti-democratic
measures. Treating any discussion of extended regional power as
treason against the Spanish state, the Aznar government had used
the war on terror as its pretext for clamping down
on any popular dissent.
The Zapatero government has indicated by this current action
that it is determined to move sharply along similar lines. After
the Bilbao car-bomb, Zapatero declared, The democratic state
is very strong and prepared for this battle. Threatening
to fight with firmness any terror, Zapatero told the
Senate that the government would use all means to thwart
and pursue those who use violence.
There was an immediate response amongst Basque nationalists,
with demonstrations called in protest. A subsequent car-bomb in
Bilbao, which injured the bodyguard of a local politician, bore
all the hallmarks of an ETA device.
Nationalist politicians have sought to exploit the arrests
to further their regionalist agenda. Pernando Barrena, ignoring
the wider implications of the attacks on democratic rights, called
them a total declaration of war against Basque independence.
Head of the regional assembly José Juan Ibarretxe, of
the moderate Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), said the arrests
were no help in finding a solution to the problem of the Basque
region. He has used the arrests as an opportunity to revive his
failed 2005 plan for free associated status for the
region.
Like Batasuna, the PNV looks to Northern Ireland as its model.
In the last week Ibarretxe has been in negotiations with Zapatero
over a proposed referendum on the future autonomy of the Basque
region. Ibarretxe described this as the first step towards a Basque-style
Downing Street process. Zapatero has rejected this out of
hand, saying that Ibarretxe cannot proceed with a popular consultation
which would have no legal force. The PP criticised Zapatero for
being timorous in these discussions.
Ibarretxe, who also accused the PSOE of trying to look tough
for potential voters, said You could never imagine putting
the leaders of Sinn Fein in prison for advancing the peace process
and achieving political agreements. He warned that Basques
would not understand why Zapatero was negotiating with ETA four
months ago, and now will not talk to the democratically-elected
president of the region. He has said that he remains confident
that an agreement will be reached on the referendum.
His negotiations now are seen as an attempt to win the support
of more hardline nationalists. With the resignation last month
of PNV President Josu Jon Imaz, who was widely seen as a moderate
negotiator with the PSOE, this indicates a renewed drive to promote
regional separation.
There is nothing progressive in such a programme, which can
have as its end result only the more Intensive exploitation of
workers divided on regional lines. The response of the Spanish
ruling class is to seek a stronger state to suppress any political
dissent. Against both of these bankrupt national capitalist perspectives
working people across the whole of Spain must fight with their
class brother and sisters internationally for an independent socialist
and internationalist political perspective against their common
exploiters. The only progressive solution to the crisis of the
Spanish state lies in the fight to transcend all national and
regional divisions by establishing the United Socialist States
of Europe.
See Also:
Spain: ETA ceasefire collapses
as Zapatero government seeks unity with Popular Party
[10 July 2007]
Spain: Popular Party
attempts to wreck ETA ceasefire
[18 November 2006]
The ETA ceasefire,
the Catalan Statute and the fracturing of SpainPart 1
[17 April 2006]
The ETA ceasefire,
the Catalan Statute and the fracturing of SpainPart 2
[18 April 2006]
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