Basque separatist group ETA declares ceasefire

BASQUE separatist group ETA declared a ceasefire last night in its bloody 42-year campaign for a homeland independent of Spain.

The rebels have vowed to give up guns and bombs to seek a democratic solution.

ETA, blamed for the deaths of 829 people in attacks on Spanish targets, said it had decided several months ago it “will not carry out armed offensive actions”. The group did not say if the ceasefire was temporary or permanent.

ETA made the announcement in a video sent to the BBC and Basque daily Gara, showing three people in berets and yellow hoods sitting at a table flanked by Basque flags, with an ETA symbol on the wall behind them.

Listed as a terrorist group by the US and European Union, ETA has not staged an attack on Spanish soil since August last year, and the authorities in Spain and France have arrested much of its top leadership.

“ETA confirms its commitment to finding a democratic solution to the conflict,” said a woman sitting in the centre.

“In its commitment to a democratic process to decide freely and democratically our future, through dialogue and negotiations, ETA is prepared today as yesterday to agree to the minimum democratic conditions necessary to put in motion a democratic process, if the Spanish government is willing.”

The Spanish government reacted cautiously.

The Interior Ministry was still examining the declaration, a spokesman said. The ministry had spoken to parliamentary groups including the opposition Partido Popular, he said.

Government officials were quoted in the El Pais newspaper as saying the declaration was a move in the right direction but ETA must still definitively abandon the armed struggle.

The paper quoted unidentified anti-terrorist sources as saying the ETA statement did not go far enough. “They do not announce the surrender of weapons nor the end of violence; it is not enough,” one source was quoted as saying.

ETA, which was founded on July 31, 1959, had been under pressure from its political allies to declare a truce. Its political wing, Batasuna, plus its ally, the Eusko Alkartasuna party, had called on ETA to agree to a “permanent ceasefire under international verification” in a document outlining a roadmap for a peace process, Spanish media reported.

The secretary-general of Eusko Alkartasuna, Pello Urizar, confirmed on Saturday that it had made the call.

ETA, which carried out its first deadly attack on June 7, 1968, announced a “permanent ceasefire” in March 2006 but months later reversed course and in December 2006 set off a bomb at a carpark at Madrid’s international airport.

After ETA formally called off the peace process in June 2007, the government stepped up its campaign, with arrests over the past three years of its leaders believed to have severely dented its operations. Since the start of this year, Spanish police, working with other forces, including in France, have arrested 68 suspected ETA members.

Spanish media say Batasuna, which has been banned from running for office since 2003 because of its ties to ETA, hoped to return to the political process ahead of local elections next year.

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