Last surrender as militants of ETA hand over weapons and explosives
MILITANT group ETA yesterday effectively ended an armed separatist campaign after almost half a century, leading French authorities to the sites where it says its caches of weapons, explosives and ammunition are hidden.
The caches contained 120 firearms, three tonnes of explosives and several thousand rounds of ammunition, a spokesman for the Artisans of Peace, the group which mediated between Eta and the French authorities, said earlier.
ETA, which killed more than 850 people in its attempt to carve out an independent state in northern Spain and southwest France, declared a ceasefire in 2011 but did not disarm.
Founded in 1959 out of anger among Basques at political and cultural repression under Franco, ETA (Euskadi Ta Askatasuna — Basque Country and Freedom) gained notoriety as one of Europe’s most intractable separatist groups.
The Spanish government said ETA’s handover of weapons in the French city of Bayonne was positive but insufficient and called on the group to formally dissolve and apologise to its victims.
ETA’s disarmament ends an era of political violence in Western Europe, but comes as nationalism is again stirring across the Continent.
Earlier this week the group said it had handed over its weapons and explosives to civilian go-betweens who would deliver them to authorities. The mediators — known as The Artisans of Peace — passed authorities a list with the coordinates for eight sites where ETA had stored its weapons arsenal, their representative told reporters in Bayonne. Security forces have since made safe the explosives.
A Spanish government source said Madrid did not believe the group would hand over all its arms, while Spain’s state prosecutor has asked the High Court to examine those surrendered as possible murder weapons.
ETA’s disarmament entailed no impunity for their crimes and they should not expect any favourable treatment, the government said in a statement. “The actions carried out today by the terrorist
group are nothing more than the result of their definitive defeat,” Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido said in Madrid.
Arnaldo Otegi, leader of Basque pro-independence party EH Bildu, said it was a day that would be welcomed by the majority of Basques, although work was not finished.
“From today we will put on the table all the problems we still have as a society and a nation,” he said, adding that the biggest issues were the around 300 ETA members still in Spanish and French prisons and the group’s victims. Their first known victim was a secret police chief in San Sebastian in 1968 and its last a French policemen shot in 2010. It chose not to disarm when it called its truce, but has been weakened in the past decade after hundreds of its members were arrested and weapons seized.
Popular revulsion at the scale of violent attacks carried out by Islamic militants had also played a part, Paddy Woodworth, who has written in depth about ETA, said.
“It had ceased to be an attractive organisation to join.”
The group’s first revolutionary gesture was to fly the banned ‘ikurrina’ — the red and green Basque flag — before the campaign escalated in the 1960s into violence that was brutally reciprocated by the Franco regime.
In 1973, ETA targeted Franco’s heir apparent Luis Carrero Blanco by digging a tunnel under the road that he drove down daily to attend Mass. They packed the tunnel with explosives and blasted Blanco’s car over a five-storey building. The assassination changed Spanish history and led to the exiled king reclaiming the throne and a shift to a constitutional monarchy.
Gorka Landaburu, who lost his thumb and was left blind in one eye after an ETA letter bomb detonated in his home in 2001, welcomed the disarmament.
“This must never happen again in our country,” he said in the Basque resort of San Sebastian. “I hope no one ever picks up pistols and bombs to defend an ideology ever again.”