[The only time the Basques make the media is when ETA set off some bombs.
The extreme repression of any force fighting for self-determination, with
torture, abductions, retrospective laws that criminalise peacefully
advocating independence etc, is non-existent to the media. Unfortunatly, it
is too from what I can see of hte English-speakign left media, despite it
being a mainstream issue against with a fresh round of ETA-claimed
bombings.]

Ireland: Conference discusses persecution of Basque movement
Emma Clancy, Belfast
15 August 2009

http://www.greenleft.org.au/2009/807/41523


*More than 100 people attended a conference in Belfast on August 8 on
political persecution in the Basque Country organised by the Don’t Extradite
the Basques Campaign as part of Feile an Phobail (Festival of the People).*

 The Basque people, whose homeland straddles the Spanish and French border,
have engaged in a long struggle for self-determination.

Julen Arzuaga, a lawyer from Behatokia (the Basque Observatory of Human
Rights), travelled from the Basque Country to speak at the conference.
Participants also heard from Inaki de Juana and Arturo Benat Villanueva, two
Belfast-based Basque activists fighting attempts by the Spanish government
to extradite them to face trumped-up charges.

Colleen Gildernew from Kevin Winters Solicitors, the firm representing both
men, outlined the legal efforts to defeat the extradition attempts.

Introducing the conference, veteran republican activist and former Sinn Fein
director of publicity Danny Morrison compared the Spanish government’s
persecution of the Basque pro-independence movement to the repression of
Irish republicans.

“The best way this community can show our solidarity with the Basque
people’s struggle for their human and national rights in this period of
severe repression by the Spanish government is by making sure that these
vindictive extradition attempts are defeated”, Morrison said.

*Dirty war*

The Spanish authorities are trying to extradite de Juana, who served 21
years in Spanish jails, on charges of “glorifying terrorism”.

The arrest warrant is based on somebody at a rally in Donostia last August,
which was celebrating de Juana's release from prison, reading a letter that
used the popular Basque expression *Aurrera bolie* (Forward with the ball).

The Spanish authorities claimed this phrase constitutes a call for the
continuation of armed struggle.

De Juana was not present at this rally and denied writing such a letter.

De Juana told the conference the attempt to extradite him and Villanueva
represented just the tip of the iceberg of persecution against
pro-independence activists. He said the Spanish government had stepped up
its dirty war against the pro-independence movement in recent months.

“The right to freedom of speech, of association, to organise politically, to
live in their own country — all of these rights are under constant attack in
the Basque Country”, he said.

“Every month, ex-political prisoners are kidnapped, interrogated and
tortured by state forces — and then maybe released, or as is the case with
Jon Anza, disappeared.”

Jon Anza, an activist in armed pro-independence group ETA, disappeared
almost four months ago. He is presumed killed either directly by, or in
collusion with, the Spanish and French security forces.

“At the very least his body should be returned to his family”, de Juana
said.

The former prisoner explained that expressions of solidarity with political
prisoners, such as displaying their pictures in public places, was illegal
in the Basque Country.

He thanked the Belfast Basque Solidarity Committee for organising an event
during the Feile in which a large banner bearing the photos of the 750
Basque political prisoners was unveiled at the Felons Club in west Belfast.

*Attacking democratic rights*

Villanueva outlined his case, explaining that he was arrested in 2001, with
15 other young pro-independence activists, by the Spanish police and accused
of being a member of Basque pro-independence socialist youth organisation
Jarrai.

Jarrai is a solely political organisation, yet it was declared illegal by
the Spanish authorities in 2005 and categorised as a “terrorist”
organisation by Spain's Supreme Court in 2007.

Charged with “membership of a terrorist organisation”, Villanueva faced a
possible 14-year jail sentence for his political activism. Released on bail
after 10 months in prison, he did not attend the political show trial.

“I decided to flee and in January 2004, I moved to Belfast and have been
living openly in west Belfast since”, Villanueva said.

“I have been very warmly welcomed by this community and have become part of
the community. I want to take this opportunity today to thank the people of
west Belfast for welcoming myself and other Basques.”

Gildernew said: “At Inaki’s hearing earlier this year [in Belfast] the judge
ruled against us, saying that the charge of ‘glorifying terrorism’ had an
equivalent under the British Terrorism Act 2006.”

She said it was clear the Spanish authorities were determined “to extract
their pound of flesh” from de Juana.

“The worst phrase they could come up with from the Donostia rally was
‘aurrera bolie’ — on with the ball. Academics from the Basque Language
Academy testified in Inaki’s hearing that this phrase cannot be seen in any
way as extolling terrorism.

“It is also a serious attack on the right to free speech in the Basque
Country. If an Irish republican was charged today for glorifying terrorism
for saying the phrase *Tiochaidh ar la* (‘Our day will come’), there would
be uproar — and rightly so.”

Gildernew also said that in Villanueva’s case, legal principles are violated
by applying the law retrospectively (Villanueva is accused of being a member
of Jarrai between 1994 and 1999 but it wasn’t criminalised until 2005 or
declared “terrorist” until 2007). She was hopeful for this reason the case
would be dismissed in the near future.

*Basque struggle*

Arzuaga, who was himself arrested and charged with being a “member of ETA”
for legally representing political prisoners, said that as a lawyer and
someone with a high profile, he was acquitted. However, but several
colleagues of his were jailed.

Arzuaga spoke about the general context of politics in the Basque Country
today. He said the abuse of human rights was being carried out in two main
ways — the illegal avenue, such as with the disappearance of Jon Anza, and
the legal avenue.

“The Spanish government has over the past 10 years introduced a wide range
of legislative reforms that give the state the legal cover to go on an
offensive against the Basque pro-independence movement through restricting
freedom of speech, association, the right to organise politically.

“Protecting the Spanish Constitution, which says the Spanish state must
retain its ‘territorial integrity’ is the justification used for this raft
of legislation that has suspended many rights.

“In the Basque Country today, it is legal for the police to arbitrarily
arrest someone and hold them in secret, incomunicado detention for five
days, where they have no access to the outside world. The torture
experienced by incommunicado detainees is well-documented.

“We are not talking about police brutality here, we are talking about
high-level torture including electrocution, asphyxiation and psychological
humiliation.

“There is also the denial of the right to ordinary justice — that is, the
use of a special, exceptional court, designed to deal with political cases."


Arzuaga said that the definition of “terrorism” had been changed in Spanish
law over the past decade to be extremely broad.

“Previously the definition of ‘terrorist’ would have been based on a
person’s actions aimed at challenging the constitutional regime — of
violence using arms or explosives”, he explained. “But over the past 10
years, a new interpretation has been developed in legislation — to define
terrorist as anyone who challenges the constitutional regime through
whatever means.

“Now acts of urban sabotage and rioting by young people fall into the
classification of terrorism because, supposedly, they could challenge the
constitutional order.

“Now peaceful, public, transparent political activity can be defined as
terrorism, as can be seen in Benat’s case, where the youth movement
Jarrai-Haika-Segi has been criminalised.

“All forms of social, cultural and political activity that is
pro-independence can be viewed as potentially challenging the constitution
because Basque independence, or independence for the other nations within
the Spanish state, is not a value in the constitution.

“Being opposed to the monarchy, being a republican — this can also be
defined as terrorism because it is against the constitution.”

Villanueva finished the conference by saying it was very heartening to hold
such a discussion that could break through the wall of silence surrounding
the Basque Country.

“Serious abuses of democratic rights are occurring each day within the
Spanish state — at the heart of Europe — yet issues like the electoral fraud
against the pro-self-determination party in the recent European elections,
the disappearance of Jon Anza and the continuation of the dirty war, the
ongoing torture of political prisoners, are not widely known.

“The attempt to extradite myself and Inaki is actually exposing the Spanish
government’s undemocratic nature to the people of Ireland.”

[For more information, and to sign a petition against the extradition of de
Juana and Villanueva, visit .]

From: International News, Green Left Weekly issue
#807<http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2009/807>18 August 2009.


-- 
"The free market is perfectly natural... do you think I am some kind of
dummy?" — Jarvis Cocker

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" — Oscar Wilde
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