http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=81
<http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=81&story_id=35397>
&story_id=35397

 


Batasuna call on ETA to 'save permanent ceasefire' 


8 January 2007

SAN SEBASTIAN — The leader of the banned political wing of ETA pleaded with
the terrorists on Monday to "maintain its ceasefire" despite the bombing of
Madrid airport.

Arnaldo Otegi, leader of Batasuna, asked ETA on Monday to "maintain intact
the contents of its announcement of 22  March" - the date when the Basque
separatists said they would give up their armed struggle.

In a a press conference in San Sebastián, Otegi asked the government to
"keep the democratic conditions" to enable dialogue to start.

Otegi said it was important talks should take part in the absence of
violence.

Until now Batasuna has not commented directly on ETA's role in the bombing,
which killed two, nor has it condemned the attack.

 

 
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Meanwhile, the government will try to form a pact between all parties in the
fight against terrorism.

Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was holding talks with the leader of the
opposition, Mariano Rajoy, who heads the conservative Popular Party.

The government wants to united under a joint pact which includes the
nationalist Basque party, the PNV, and Popular Party (PP).

The PNV are a key ally for the socialist government in the Basque Country,
while the PP are the main opposition.

Meanwhile, on Saturday police dispersed thousands of people in San
Sebastian, who took part in an illegal  demonstration prohibited by Spain's
high court.

The rally was organized by the so-called Pro-Amnesty Movement, which,
according to the judge who issued the ban, is a front for the illegal group
Askatasuna which  demands amnesty for ETA prisoners.

Similar illegal protests were staged last year to demand the relocation to
the Basque region of ETA members jailed in other parts of the country.

The organizers decided to hold Saturday's demonstration despite the judicial
ban and several thousands of people arrived in the vicinity of this northern
city's Anoeta Stadium, among them leaders of Askatasuna and members of the
outlawed Batasuna, ETA's political wing.

Demonstrators chanted "No amnesty, no peace" and "Fighting is the only way".

The incidents came on a day when rescue workers recovered the corpse of a
second victim of last week's car bombing at a parking garage at Madrid's
Barajas Airport.

The body of the 19-year-old Ecuadorian was flown - along with his loved ones
- to his homeland later Saturday.

Another Ecuadorian was found dead earlier in the week amid some of the
40,000 tons of rubble created by the powerful explosion.

The men became the first fatalities in an ETA attack in over three years,
while the 30 December bombing was the first terrorist action mounted by the
group since it  announced a cease-fire in March 2006.

ETA has killed more than 800 people in its four decades-old campaign to
create an independent Basque nation from parts of northern Spain and
southwestern France.

Police earlier this week found bomb-making material and an almost-complete
explosive device thought to belong to ETA in the Basque region, stoking
fears that the group could carry out more attacks.

Spain's Basque region enjoys significant autonomy and is governed by a
moderate nationalist party that, like the great majority of Basques, rejects
ETA and terrorist violence. 



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