Las Vegas Review-Journal

ETA dissolves; Spain pledges to prosecute

- By Aritz Parra and Jamey Keaten The Associated Press

MADRID— Basque separatist group ETA publicly declared its dissolutio­n Thursday, bringing an end to a campaign against Spain that saw more than 850 people killed over more than four decades of bombings and shootings.

In an open letter to the Basque people, ETA said it has “completely dismantled all of its structures” and “will no longer express political positions, promote initiative­s or interact with other stakeholde­rs.”

Its announceme­nt was dismissed as propaganda by victims’ groups, while the Spanish government said it would continue to prosecute anyone with any links to any of the violence conducted during the ETA campaign, which blighted Spain’s transition to democracy from the late 1970s onwards.

ETA formally announced its dissolutio­n in a letter read out at the headquarte­rs of a conflict resolution group in Geneva.

That came a day after the group’s intentions were known in a separate leaked letter that had been sent in April to the Basque regional government, workers’ unions and others.

David Harland, the executive director of the Centre for Humanitari­an Dialogue, which has been involved in peace negotiatio­ns between ETA and the Spanish government dating back to 2004, told The Associated Press that Thursday’s announceme­nt was a “unilateral” move by the group.

Basque-language website naiz. eus also published audio with the voices of two well-known ETA members, Josu Urrutikoet­xea — also known as Josu Ternera — and Marixol Iparragirr­e, reading the letter’s content.

In response, the Spanish government vowed to continue prosecutin­g the organizati­on’s militants who had sought to create a new Basque homeland in northern Spain and southern France.

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