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View Full Version : ETA prisoners recognize damage caused by campaign, accept legitimacy of jails



DDR
7th January 2014, 13:03
http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/12/29/inenglish/1388319451_914554.html


The prisoner collective of terrorist group ETA, which represents more than 500 inmates from the Basque separatist organization, released a taped statement on Saturday recognizing the legality of Spain’s penitentiary system, expressing its agreement for individual prisoners to negotiate individual early release terms, and rejecting the violence and “suffering and multilateral damage caused” by their terror campaign.

Via the video, which was released through the newspaper Berria, ETA is taking a key step in terms of its disbanding, two years after it announced a definitive ceasefire, and just two months after the so-called Parot Doctrine was annulled by the European Court of Human Rights, which paved the way for the release of 10 percent of the ETA prisoners who were still behind bars.

The statement, which was peppered with the usual rhetoric of the group in its first section, responds to the requests made seven months ago by the Foro Social - or Social Forum, consisting of the Basque pacifist organization Lokarri and a number of other international conflict resolution organizations - to assume the legality of the penitentiary system and thus unfreeze the situation of many prisoners. The government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy was not willing to make any moves - neither transferring ETA prisoners to jails in the Basque Country, closer to their relatives, nor improving the conditions under which they are incarcerated - while ETA was unwilling to recognize the validity of the prisons system nor take steps toward its dissolution

After the Social Forum, in June and July, lawyer Iñigo Iruin and the head of the Basque abertzale radical left, Fernando Barrena, also called on the ETA prisoner collective to recognize the legality of the prisons system. Previously, the abertzale was legalized and permitted to run in elections by openly rejecting terrorism. The objective now is for ETA prisoners to achieve penitentiary benefits and apply for early release by doing the same.

The statement adheres to the guidelines set out by the Social Forum and by the abertzale left. The third point acknowledges the damage caused to the victims of terrorism. “We recognize with complete honesty the suffering and multilateral damage caused,” it states. The fourth point includes the rejection of terrorism. “From now on we accept the new scenario after the definitive end to violence,” the statement says, adding that: “We reject the employment of the methods used in the past.”

The sixth and seventh points of the statement accept the legality of Spain’s prisons and the individual reinsertion of ETA inmates. “We can accept […] that this takes place using legal channels, even when this implicitly means for us the acceptance of our sentences. We share the view that both the law and its application carry with them an essential function with a view to the future, given that they must be used to strengthen the steps that need to be taken.” The statement adds: “We are prepared to study and examine the possibility that the process which will end with our return home takes place on a step-by-step basis, via individual commitments and in a prudent timeframe.”

By assuming these commitments, ETA is adhering to the requisites demanded by the so-called Vía Nancares, so that inmates can enjoy penitentiary benefits. The Vía was set in motion by the government of Socialist Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, after a failed process of dialogue with ETA in 2006. Sources close to Zapatero on Saturday called the step taken by the ETA prisoners collective as “highly significant,” given that it “adds value to the definitive ceasefire announced by ETA on October 20, 2011.”

To reach this point, ETA’s prisoners’ collective has had to digest the fact that the Rajoy government was not prepared to negotiate any solutions with the terrorist group, and that there was not going to be a peace agreement for the inmates. It has also taken into account the tensions caused by the freeing of 60 ETA prisoners in the wake of the Strasbourg ruling on the Parot doctrine, which caused outrage among many sections of Spanish society.

At the outset of last year, the ETA prisoners’ collective held a debate on the issue of accepting the legitimacy of the prisons system and individual reinsertion of inmates. In the end, they decided to call for an amnesty. But now the reality of the situation has been taken into account – even in the most hardline section of ETA – and the unrealistic calls for an amnesty have been laid to rest.

DDR
9th January 2014, 14:45
And of course this has been the response of the spanish goverment:

http://elpais.com/elpais/2014/01/08/inenglish/1389201023_529343.html


The Civil Guard on Wednesday arrested eight people for belonging to the so-called prisoners’ front, the only remaining operative arm of the terrorist organization ETA, as Interior Minister Jorge Fernández Díaz described it. Among the detainees were the lawyers Arantza Zulueta and Jon Enparantza, who have previously been arrested for their alleged role within the ETA structure whose purpose is to keep incarcerated terrorists in line with the group’s ideology and objectives. The last occasion was in 2011 in relation to the uncovering of several ETA weapons caches in France.

The raids, which took place in Bilbao, Navarre and Gipuzkoa, involved a police search of Zulueta’s offices in Bilbao, the suspected center of operations to coordinate ETA’s prisoner collective.

Fernández Díaz called the operation as a strike against the “tentacle with which ETA controls inmates.”

The move comes three days after 74 former ETA inmates issued a statement in Durango backing the current initiative by serving prisoners to reject violence and adhere to Spanish penitentiary policy in order to receive sentence reductions and other benefits. Zulueta was present at the Durango meeting but police sources said Wednesday’s operation was unconnected.

ETA recently took another conciliatory step by expressing its “recognition of the suffering and multilateral damage” caused by its four-decade-long armed struggle to establish a Basque homeland in northern Spain and southern France. In October 2011, the terrorist organization announced a definitive end to violence but has yet to fully disband, as the Spanish government demands before any negotiation over ETA’s prisoner collective can be considered.

BTW that operation was tweeted by the Ministry of Interior (homeland security, I guess will be the best translation) 30 minutes before it began, so some people had time to leave which of course only means that these arrest are just pure propaganda.

blake 3:17
13th January 2014, 22:40
Thousands march in Bilbao in support of ETA
Protesters in Spain's Basque Country defy Madrid by holding mass rally marked by tensions over jailed separatists.


Tens of thousands of protesters in Spain's Basque Country have defied Madrid by holding a mass demonstration marked by tensions over jailed members of the armed separatist group ETA.

Crowds filled the streets in the northern city of Bilbao on Saturday in a march for "human rights, understanding and peace", after a judge banned another demonstration planned to demand concessions for the prisoners.

The treatment of imprisoned ETA convicts is one of the most delicate issues in a standoff between the authorities and western Europe's last major armed secessionist movement.

Organisers had called for a silent demo but cries of "Basque prisoners home!" rang out and demonstrators applauded prisoners' family members who marched with white scarves around their necks.

Spanish and French leaders refuse to negotiate with ETA, which is branded a terrorist organisation by the European Union and the United States.

ETA is blamed for 829 killings in its four-decade campaign for an independent Basque homeland in northern Spain and southwestern France.

Concessions demanded

Sensitivities flared last month when prisoners' groups pushed for concessions from authorities, outraging victims' families.

A judge at Madrid's top criminal court on Friday issued a ruling prohibiting a demonstration that was called explicitly in support of the prisoners, saying it was organised by a banned group.

Basque nationalist and separatist political parties then weighed in, calling a new "rights" march on Saturday evening, which drew many supporters of the prisoners.

They called for jailed ETA members to be moved to prisons closer to their families.

One of them, Itziar Goienetxia, 52, said she lived in the Basque country and had to travel 1,200 kilometres there and back for a 40-minute visit to her husband in jail in the southern town of Cadiz.

"It's a double sentence," affecting her as well as the prisoner, she told AFP.

The conservative Basque National Party which governs the region and a left-wing pro-independence grouping joined forces in calling the march, in a rare joint show of strength.

Full article: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2014/01/thousands-march-bilbao-support-eta-201411212246181625.html

Raquin
13th January 2014, 23:24
How disappointing.