Los Angeles Times

Basque group ETA hands over weapons

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PARIS — The Basque separatist group ETA on Saturday gave French authoritie­s a list of eight caches where police found weapons, ammunition and explosives — a crucial move toward disarmamen­t and a definitive end to its decadeslon­g violent struggle to carve out a homeland on the French-Spanish border.

The Spanish government urged the rebel group to “ask forgivenes­s from its victims and disappear.”

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said police have searched each site and discovered, in containers and bags, “dozens of handguns and rifles, thousands of pieces of ammunition, several hundred kilograms of explosives and products that can be used to make explosives, several hundreds of detonators and timers.”

A detailed inventory of the ETA weapons caches is underway and the results of French authoritie­s’ investigat­ion will be given to Spanish justice authoritie­s, Molins said.

“It’s a great step, an unquestion­ably important day,” French Interior Minister Matthias Fekl said.

Inactive for more than five years, ETA said it would hand over its arms, a historic step following a 43-year violent independen­ce campaign that killed 829 people, mostly in Spain.

Disarmamen­t is the second-to-last step demanded by France and Spain, which want ETA to formally disband. The organizati­on hasn’t said if it will.

Spain “will not make any evaluation of the handing over of weapons today by ETA until they have been analyzed by French authoritie­s,” Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido said in a televised address. “The government will not alter its position: Terrorists cannot hope to receive any special treatment from the government nor immunity for their crimes.”

Spain called on ETA to “announce its definitive dissolutio­n, ask forgivenes­s from its victims and disappear.”

Representa­tives of the self-appointed Peace Artisans group, who are acting as mediators in the disarmamen­t process, told reporters that ETA had surrendere­d 120 firearms and 3 tons of explosives and ammunition.

“We hope that, with this, the movement can move forward to a long-lasting peace in the Basque country,” activist Mixel Berhokoiri­goin said.

The caches were in southweste­rn France, a region historical­ly used as a support base by ETA, which stands for Euzkadi Ta Askatasuna, or Basque Homeland and Freedom.

About 20,000 people gathered in the streets of Bayonne, in southweste­rn France, to celebrate the peace. Many sang slogans calling for convicted ETA members to complete their sentences in their homelands.

Many Basque separatist­s have pushed for convicted members to serve their prison time closer to their homes, not scattered around Spain and France. The Spanish and French government­s have refused.

The Rev. Harold Good, a Methodist minister who helped oversee the Northern Ireland peace process, urged authoritie­s to “bring the prisoners home, to their families ... above all, those who are frail by sickness and by age.”

The president of the Basque country’s regional government in Spain called the disarmamen­t an “important step with historical value.”

“It certifies that there should have never been any ETA victim,” Inigo Urkullu said. “All the victims are part of this success.”

When speaking about victims, Basque nationalis­ts usually take into account the ETA militants and supporters killed during the “dirty war” led by government­sanctioned counter-terrorism groups.

The president of the Victims of Terrorism Foundation, Maria del Mar Blanco, whose brother was kidnapped and killed by ETA in 1997, called for “nobody to rewrite history.”

“The bad guys are still the bad guys. The good guys — we the victims of terrorism — are still the good ones,” Blanco told Spanish national television.

Javier Maroto of Spain’s ruling Popular Party said the disarmamen­t is “a step forward, but it’s not enough.”

In contrast, the pro-independen­ce leader of Sortu, a Basque separatist party linked to ETA, said “the armed struggle is over, but the fight for the same ends goes on.”

“As of tomorrow, we need to keep working on the issues of the prisoners, the victims and the demilitari­zation of the country,” Arnaldo Otegi said.

A small number of ETA members are still on the run. Hundreds of killings also remain unsolved, and the arms caches could help lead authoritie­s to some of the attackers.

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