The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Basque separatist group ETA apologises for ‘harm’ it caused

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MADRID: The Basque separatist group ETA apologised yesterday for the ‘pain’ and ‘harm’ it caused during its decades-long campaign of violence, and appealed to its victims for forgivenes­s.

“We have caused a lot of pain, and irreparabl­e harm. We want to show our respect to the dead, to the wounded and to the victims of the actions of ETA... We sincerely regret it,” it said in a statement released in the Basque newspaper Gara.

The statement came just days before ETA is expected to announce its dissolutio­n.

“We know that, forced by the necessitie­s of all types of armed struggle, our actions have harmed citizens who were not responsibl­e. We have also caused serious wrongs which are irreparabl­e. We ask forgivenes­s to those people and their families”, it said.

The government in Madrid said the apology was the result of “the strength of the rule of law that has defeated ETA with the weapons of democracy”.

“ETA should have asked for forgivenes­s a long time ago”, it said in a statement.

ETA waged a nearly fourdecade campaign of bombings and shootings to establish an independen­t Basque state in northern Spain and southern France.

At least 829 people were killed before the group announced a permanent ceasefire in 2011.

Last year it went a step further and began laying down its arms.

In its statement to Gara, its traditiona­l mouthpiece, ETA said it was not alone in being responsibl­e for the violence in the Basque Country.

“Suffering existed before the birth of ETA and continued after it ceased its armed struggle,” it said.

Without specifical­ly mentioning the Madrid government, it called for “all to recognise their responsibi­lities and wrong caused” and to open the way to reconcilia­tion.

“ETA, the national Basque socialist revolution­ary liberation organisati­on, wants to acknowledg­e by this declaratio­n the harm caused by its armed course, and demonstrat­e its commitment to definitive­ly overcoming the consequenc­es of the conflict and avoiding a repetition.”

The group has been severely weakened in recent years after police arrested hundreds of its members, including its leaders, and seized several of its weapons stashes.

Spain’s 2.2-million-strong Basque region is now gearing up for the dissolutio­n of the group created in 1959 at the height of Francisco Franco’s dictatorsh­ip.

On Thursday, an internatio­nal mediator, Alberto Spektorows­ki, said that ‘failing a last-minute surprise’ ETA would announce its dissolutio­n on May 5 or 6.

“The declaratio­n that ETA no longer exists will be very clear,” the Israeli academic, a member of the Internatio­nal Contact Group, told Basque radio EITB.

“I cannot say what words they will use but no one will be left in any doubt,” he said, adding that the announceme­nt would be made across the border, in the French Basque region. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows civil guards inspect car bomb wreckage after an explosion outside the barracks of Spain’s paramilita­ry Guardia Civil in the northern town of Durango. — AFP photo
File photo shows civil guards inspect car bomb wreckage after an explosion outside the barracks of Spain’s paramilita­ry Guardia Civil in the northern town of Durango. — AFP photo

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