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Spain: Ban on Basque separatist party extended
By Paul Bond
4 February 2006
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The Spanish High Court has renewed its legal ban on the Basque
separatist party Batasuna. The decision prompted a demonstration
in the Basque region called in defence of civil and political
rights.
Batasuna, a parliamentary party calling for the formation of
a Basque national state, was proscribed by the Supreme Court in
2003 on the grounds that it constituted the political wing of
the armed group ETA (Euskadi ta AskatasunaBasque Homeland
and Freedom). Prior to the ban, Batasuna had received some 12
percent of the regional vote.
Although the party remains illegal, a previous court order
prohibiting its activities had recently expired. Batasuna had
called a rally in Barakaldo, near Bilbao, which it described as
the partys first national assembly since its proscription.
The presiding judge, Fernando Grande-Marlaska of the National
Court, said that Batasuna had periodically been allowed to hold
rallies and meetings since the ban. (A march in August was allowed
to go ahead, for example, but along a different route from the
one originally proposed.) But the judge said a congress called
to elect a new executive committee would be going too far. Banning
the proposed rally, he also extended the ban on Batasunas
public, private and institutional activities for another
two years. He described the organisation as a structure
controlled by the leaders of ETA.
Police immediately moved to close down any remaining premises
used by Batasuna. The partys offices in Pamplona were sealed
by police the day after the judgement. On January 19, some 20
police officers shut down premises in Donostia, which the party
had used for press conferences.
Basque nationalists promptly called a demonstration outside
the Bilbao Exhibition Centre in Barakaldo, where the rally was
to have been held. The decision to allow the rally to proceed
was taken by the regional government, a coalition of nationalist
parties. The regional justice minister, Joseba Azkarraga, argued
that Batasunas supporters should be allowed to express themselves.
The other nationalist parties condemn ETA, but say that Batasuna
will need to be included in any peace process. On the morning
of the demonstration, the National Court ordered police to intervene
if there were any chants or banners supporting ETA.
Reports of the attendance at the rally ranged from 8,000 according
to El Pais, the daily paper closest to the PSOE government,
to 20,000 cited by nationalist sources. The main speaker was Batasunas
leader, Arnaldo Otegi. Other Batasuna leaders were also on the
platform, along with Northern Irelands Sinn Fein parliamentary
deputy, Aengus OSnodaigh. Batasuna holds up the negotiations
between the British government and the Irish republican movement
as the model for the deal they wish to do with the Spanish state.
In his 13-minute speech, Otegi talked of new provocations and
obstacles to the peace process in the Basque region. He again
stressed the partys determination to participate in any
further discussion on the regions status, saying that a
process which will provide solutions to the conflict was
within reach.
Otegi said more about this in a recent interview with Radio
Euskadi. He appealed to the good will of all parties
in the region to collaborate in the development of a regional
plan, describing the ban on Batasuna as an attempt to disrupt
the unofficial relations the party had forged with other nationalist
parties in the region.
For the ruling Basque National Party (PNV), the initial composition
of any Basque homeland would be the three Basque provinces in
Spain. Batasuna (and ETA) have always insisted that it must also
include the Basque province within France. In his radio interview,
Otegi was at his most conciliatory towards the PNV. He said that
he had met with the PNVs Juan José Ibarretxe after
Grande-Marlaskas judgement, and that they had a common understanding
of the intentions behind it.
In 2003, Ibarretxe put forward a plan for extending Basque
autonomy. Otegi told Radio Euskadi that Ibarretxe faced
structural difficulties in implementing a peace process
because of his restriction to three territories. At the same time,
though, Otegi said that Ibarretxe could contribute importantly
to any plan, which would only be realised through the collaboration
of all parties in the region.
Patxi Lopez, head of the Basque Socialist Party (PSEthe
regional sister party of the ruling national PSOE), said that
the only obstacle to peace was the continued existence of ETA.
Its disbanding was a prerequisite for any talks with Batasuna,
he said, and Otegi had missed an excellent opportunity
to call on ETA to disarm.
Successive Spanish governments have continued to use the Basque
region as a testing ground for undemocratic measures aimed at
suppressing any domestic political unrest. The banning of Batasuna,
which disenfranchised large sections of the Basque country, was
the first time a political party had been outlawed in Spain since
the end of the dictatorship of General Franco.
The banning of Batasuna was initially carried out by the right-wing
Popular Party (PP) government of José Maria Aznar. The
PP, now in opposition, had demanded the banning of the Batasuna
meeting. After the rally, local PP leader Carmelo Barrio said
that it had served only to promote the ideals of ETA-Batasuna.
Urging greater intervention, he said that the weakness of
our leaders is directly proportional to the arrogance with which
the terrorists and their supporters brandish their antidemocratic
arguments. The PP demanded an investigation into the rally,
describing it as a front for ETA.
At the same time, the rightist public employees union Manos
Limpias (Clean Hands) filed charges against local government officials
for consenting to the rally in the face of Grande-Marlaskas
judgement. Also filing charges against the rallys chief
protagonist, Otegi, Manos Limpias demanded legal action
from the public prosecutor, whose mission is to promote
justice in defence of legality... and the public interest.
Such police and court powers, having been tested in the Basque
region, will be used against the whole Spanish working class.
Batasuna seeks to exploit this to justify their separatist agenda,
which can only further the division of the Spanish working class
along regional lines and strengthen the right wing.
PSOE Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was
in favour of letting the meeting go ahead and has already offered
talks if ETA disarms. He too has learned from the way Britains
Labour government has worked with Washington and Dublin to bring
Sinn Fein into a devolved executive, in order to better police
the Catholic population in Northern Ireland and ensure that the
basic requirements of global investors for stability are met and
cuts in government expenditure are pushed through.
See Also:
Spains largest
trial targets Basque separatist ETA
[12 December 2005]
Banned Basque demonstration
attacked by police
[25 August 2005]
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