eta bows to changed political landscape with cease 2006 march

Upload: juan-jose-alonso-tresguerres

Post on 09-Apr-2018

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/8/2019 ETA Bows to Changed Political Landscape With Cease 2006 March

    1/3

    NPR March 23, 2006

    ETA Bows to Changed PoliticalLandscape with Cease-fire

    by Jerome Socolovsky March 23, 2006

    To listen to the audio

    The Basque separatist group ETA bows to a changing political landscape in

    Spain -- where political solutions have become more effective than violent

    solutions -- and announces a permanent cease-fire. The announcement

    apparently ends a decades-long campaign of violence against the government

    in Madrid. Renee Montagne talks to reporter Jerome Socolovsky.

    RENEE MONTAGNE, host:

    This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Renee Montagne.

    One of Western Europe's last armed movements could be at an end, with the

    announcement by the Basque separatist group ETA that it's calling a

    permanent cease-fire. The truce is set to begin hours from now. The Spanish

    government is heading into negotiations with ETA on the future of the

    northern Basque region. ETA has been fighting for years to make it

    independent. Over the past four decades, ETA guerillas have taken the lives

    of more than 800 people, among them judges, politicians and journalists.

    Reporter Jerome Socolovsky is traveling in the Basque region, and he joins menow. Hello.

    JEROME SOCOLOVSKY reporting:

    (00:38) Good morning, Renee.

    MONTAGNE: So, is this the beginning of the end of the violence there?

    SOCOLOVSKY: Well, we have to keep in mind that ETA has been using violence

    as a means to its end for nearly 40 years. They've also declared cease-fires

    before, and cancelled them after negotiations with the government broke

    down. So, a lot of people here are mistrustful not only of ETA's intentions, butthey're not sure that this will actually lead to a permanent ceasefire. But

    there is a lot of optimism, because this is the first time ETA uses the term

    permanent.

    And ETA is a hierarchical structure. It's not like Islamic terrorist groups, where

    the leaders often don't have control of the people beneath them. When I've

    been in the Basque country before, talking to young people who may

    sympathize with ETA, they all seem to trust what the leadership of the group

    says they should be doing.

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5296488http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5296488
  • 8/8/2019 ETA Bows to Changed Political Landscape With Cease 2006 March

    2/3

    MONTAGNE: (1:30) Take a step back just for a moment here, Jerome, and

    give us a small history of the campaign for self-rule in the Basque region or

    independence.

    SOCOLOVSKY: Well, the actual campaign for self-rule goes back more than 100

    years to the beginnings of Basque nationalism as a movement. ETA actuallystarted as a group in the 1950s, during the dictatorship of General Francisco

    Franco in Spain. And, at first, they were seen as a resistance group. Even

    after they resorted to violence. They actually killed the prime minister under

    Franco, who was supposed to be his successor as leader of Spain. And some

    people even believe that ETA helped move Spain forward to democracy.

    But after the return to democracy, ETA continued with its attacks, and some

    of them became very bloody, and the group fell out of favor with many

    Spaniards, and with many Basques as well.

    MONTAGNE: (2:26) And two years ago, the attacks on Madrid's commuter train

    that killed 200 people were initially linked by the government to ETA. Did, in

    the end, ETA have anything to do with those attacks?

    SOCOLOVSKY: Well, indeed, the prime minister at the time, Jos Mara Aznar,

    in the first few days after the attacks, was squarely blaming ETA. And now,

    some people on the far right still suggest that ETA had some sort of role, but

    the investigations don't seem to point in that direction. What many

    commentators here are saying is that the attacks do have some sort of link to

    this, in that it created an even greater wave of revulsion against terrorism

    here in Spain, that ETA is now recoiling from using those methods.

    But I think what's interesting here is that, at the time, you had a very hard-

    lined government clamping down on ETA through every possible means. And

    now there's a government that's more open to dialogue. So, it's almost like a

    bad cop, good cop situation that has led to this.

    MONTAGNE: (3:27) And does this have any implications for other places in

    Spain, like Catalonia, that have been seeking autonomy?

    SOCOLOVSKY: Well, it's all one package deal, it seems. A lot of people are

    saying it's not a coincidence that ETA announced ceasefire a day after an

    agreement was reached on a self-rule statute for another region, Catalonia,

    which is where Barcelona is. And in that statute, the government agreed to

    call Catalonia a nationality. This is something the Basques have wanted for a

    long time. They also want a new statute that gives them even more self-rule

    than the considerable self-rule they have now. They have their own police

    force, their own parliament. They even have their own president.

    MONTAGNE: (4:14) And finally, the reaction among the people of Spain?

    SOCOLOVSKY: Well, in Spain, there's a mixture of euphoria and skepticism ormistrust. A lot of people have been waiting for years, if not decades to hear

  • 8/8/2019 ETA Bows to Changed Political Landscape With Cease 2006 March

    3/3

    this news. But, at the same time, they hope it doesn't fail like in previous

    times.

    MONTAGNE: Reporter Jerome Socolovsky on the road in Spain's northern

    Basque region. Thanks very much.

    SOCOLOVSKY: You're welcome, Renee. (4:38)

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5296488

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5296488http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5296488