Oman Daily Observer

Basque group ETA gives France list of arms caches under disarmamen­t vow

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BAYONNE, France: The Basque group ETA, which has fought a long and often-bloody drive for independen­ce, provided France with a list of arms caches on Saturday under a promise to completely disarm, a move the French government called “a major step”.

Spain issued a stern response and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said the group, which he described as “terrorists”, could expect no government favours and “still less, impunity for their crimes”.

ETA says its initiative will bring the final curtain down on a decades-long armed campaign to gain independen­ce for the Basque country straddling the Spanish-French border.

France on Saturday mobilised nearly 200 police along with bomb disposal experts to secure the weapons in the handover, according to the French interior ministry.

Eight caches of weapons containing 120 firearms and three tonnes of explosives were on the list of sites located in the southweste­rn PyreneesAt­lantiques department bordering Spain, according to Michel Tubiana, a human-rights lawyer who is a member of a group acting as intermedia­ry.

“This stage of neutralisi­ng an arse- nal of arms and explosives is a major step,” French Interior Minister Matthias Fekl said.

At a news conference in the French Basque city of Bayonne earlier on Saturday, a group called the Internatio­nal Verificati­on Commission (IVC) confirmed that it had received a list of arms caches from intermedia­ries that it handed “to the French authoritie­s.”

Founded in 1959, ETA has been blamed for the deaths of 829 people in a string of bombings and shootings dating back to 1968. Thousands more were injured.

In 2011, after a string of arrests among its senior ranks, ETA announced that it had abandoned its armed campaign. But the move did not entail disarmamen­t.

ETA more recently sought to negotiate its dissolutio­n in exchange for amnesties or improved prison conditions for roughly 350 of its members held in Spain and France, and for current members living under cover.

But both France and Spain have taken a firm line and refused any concession­s.

The IVC, set up to monitor ETA’s 2011 ceasefire pledge, is not recognised by either the French or the Spanish government­s, but its involvemen­t is supported by the government in Spain’s autonomous Basque region.

It lists among its members Ronnie Kasrils, a former minister of intelligen­ce in post-apartheid South Africa; Chris Maccabe, a former senior British civil servant who helped negotiate Northern Ireland’s “Good Friday” peace agreement in 1998; and General Satish Nambiar, a former deputy chief in the Indian army with experience of UN peacekeepi­ng in the former Yugoslavia.

The IVC’s spokesman, Ram Manikkalin­gam, a former advisor on the peace process in Sri Lanka, told the press conference in Bayonne that the panel had received the list of caches via “the artisans of peace” — a French civil society group headed by an environmen­talist, Txetx Etcheverry.

 ?? — AFP ?? People take part in a rally in support of the ‘Artisans de la Paix’ in Bayonne on Saturday following the announceme­nt of disarmamen­t by ETA.
— AFP People take part in a rally in support of the ‘Artisans de la Paix’ in Bayonne on Saturday following the announceme­nt of disarmamen­t by ETA.

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