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ETA Reeling From Crackdown
2004-02-20
The Basque separatist group ETA is reeling from so many setbacks that some are daring to hope it may be the start of the end of decades of political violence. When Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar recently visited the region, Maria San Gil, a Basque municipal official, welcomed him saying: "Now we feel safer and that’s thanks to your anti-terrorism policy." Aznar is convinced that "It won’t be long before the killers of ETA are defeated." Such claims have been confounded repeatedly over the years. Aznar himself survived a car bombing in 1995, the year before he was elected prime minister. But the cautious optimism is evident this time around. It follows mass arrests, weapons seizures, cooperation from neighboring France and the banning of ETA’s purported political front. Also, U.S. and European Union authorities have added ETA to their lists of terrorist organizations, undercutting its legitimacy and funding. The relative lull in violence is seen in the numbers. Three people died in ETA attacks last year, one of the lowest tolls since university students founded the group in the 1950s to compel Spain to grant independence to the prosperous, three-province Basque Country. Last year, Spanish police detained 187 men and women on suspicion of belonging to or collaborating with "Euskadi ta Askatasuna," or Basque Homeland and Freedom. Another 65 were arrested on the French side of the Pyrenees border, which used to be a relatively safe haven.

"The continual detentions mean that those joining are younger and lack experience," Javier Balza, the interior minister of the Basque regional government, said in his office in Vitoria, 37 miles south of Bilbao. ETA has claimed responsibility for more than 800 deaths since 1968. After the 11th cease-fire ended in 2000, Aznar’s government stepped up the crackdown, striking also at alleged sources of Basque support by shutting two newspapers and a radio station. One editor-in-chief, Martxelo Otamendi, alleged he was tortured by police. For all that, "ETA still has money, weapons and many youths willing to risk long years in prison," said Javier Ortiz, a political analyst at El Mundo newspaper.
Posted by:Paul Moloney

#1  I recall a post several days ago, where the ETA cried for a truce. I recall yelling, "Don't Bite Aznar!" Good to know he didn't: it may not have been called a Hudna, but it sure smelled of one.
Posted by: Ptah   2004-2-20 7:17:39 PM  

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