Baltimore Sun

ETA separatist­s disband after 6 decades of killings in Spain

- By Aritz Parra Euskadi ta Askatasuna

MADRID — The Basque separatist group ETA said it has dismantled its organizati­onal structure after a sixdecade independen­ce campaign that killed hundreds in Spain, taking the final step in disbanding after disarming last year and bringing an end to one of Europe’s bloodiest nationalis­t conflicts in recent times.

The Spanish government vowed Wednesday not to abandon its investigat­ion of crimes from the group’s violent past, saying security forces would “continue to pursue the terrorists, wherever they may be.”

ETA, whose initials stand for or “Basque Homeland and Freedom” in the Basque language, killed more than 850 people during its violent campaign to create an independen­t state in northern Spain and southern France, most of them during the 1980s when Spain was transition­ing from dictatorsh­ip to democracy.

In a letter sent to Basque regional institutio­ns, ETA said it had “completely dissolved all its structures,” and acknowledg­ed its responsibi­lity in failing to solve the Basque “political conflict.”

With its support waning and stepped-uppolice operations on both sides of the Pyrenees underminin­g its ability to wage an armed struggle, ETA had already declared a “definitive end” in 2011 to its armed campaign.

But it took six more years for the group to give up most of its arsenal and another year for it to announce that its remaining members — numbering fewer than 50, according to Spanish officials — would be disbanding this week.

Responding to the announceme­nt, Spanish Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Consuelo Ordonez, whose brother was killed, holds a sign Wednesday that says, “ETA killed 853 innocent people.” Zoido vowed to keep investigat­ing unresolved crimes attributed to ETA.

“ETA obtained nothing through its promise to stop killing, and it will obtain nothing by announcing what they call dissolutio­n,” he told reporters.

In the letter, dated April 16 and published first by the eldiario.es news website, ETA noted its dissolutio­n “doesn’t overcome the conflict that the Basque Country maintains with Spain and with France.”

It wasn’t clear why the letter took more than two weeks to become public. A spokesman for the Basque regional government said it received ETA’s letter “a few days earlier.”

A final public declaratio­n was expected Thursday, several sources in Basque separatist circles said.

Founded in 1958 during Gen. Francisco Franco’s regime, the group grabbed global headlines when it killed t he dictator’s anointed successor, Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco, in 1973. It remained active after Franco’s death in 1975.

In all, the group killed 853 people over four decades, according to a tally by the Spanish Interior Ministry.

ETA also injured more than 2,600 people, kidnapped 86 and threatened hundreds more, according to the latest government count.

In what became known as Spain’s “dirty war” on terror, at least 28 separatist­s were killed by death squads set up by members of Spain’s security forces to perform extrajudic­ial killings of ETA militants. A few dozen more were killed by independen­t paramilita­ry groups.

Civil society groups that have overseen ETA’s staggered finale scheduled an event in the southern French town of Cambo-lesBains on Friday to mark the organizati­on’s end.

At least 358 crimes believed to involve ETA are unresolved, according to Covite, an associatio­n of victims, survivors and their relatives that is campaignin­g for ETA members to be held to account.

At a news conference Wednesday in the Spanish city of San Sebastian, Covite President Consuelo Ordonez criticized a statement last week in which ETA sought forgivenes­s from victims “who didn’t have a direct role in the conflict.”

Ordonez’s brother Gregorio, a leading regional figure in the conservati­ve Popular Party, was killed by ETA in 1995.

“This is not the end of ETA that we wanted and, above all, is not the end of ETA we deserved,” she said.

 ?? ALVARO BARRIENTOS/AP ??
ALVARO BARRIENTOS/AP

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