1 / 11

The Basque Region and the ETA: Overview

The Basque Region and the ETA: Overview. Their language, known as Euskera, has no clear links with any other known  Basques have lived in Europe since before Roman times.

lily
Télécharger la présentation

The Basque Region and the ETA: Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Basque Region and the ETA: Overview • Their language, known as Euskera, has no clear links with any other known Basques have lived in Europe since before Roman times. • The protection and promotion of Euskera has always been at the heart of the Basque struggleAbout 30% of the 2.5 million Basque people speak itRadio and television stations

  2. Fishermen: whales and cod. Columbus's crew was largely Basque.

  3. Franco Regime

  4. Franco’s Regime • Strong opponents of Franco's Nationalist troops during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930sDuring Franco's 40-year rule region is punished. Franco on the Basque region : "traitor provinces.” • Franco bans the speaking of Euskera in public.

  5. Franco’s Regime • Little economic investment in the region. • From 1959 ETA fights war for independence for the Basque country- seven regions in northern Spain and southwestern France

  6. ETA first emerged as a student resistance movement • ETA kills more than 800 peopleTheir targets were mostly police, judges and politicians. • Terrorist activities funded through kidnappings, robberies, and extortion

  7. ETA has made an explicit commitment to the “action-reaction theory” insurgents carry out attacks to provoke arbitrary and indiscriminate government reprisals against the population, calculating that this will increase resentment and win insurrectionary forces more support

  8. Post-1975 • Transition to democracy in Spain brought Basque home rule own parliament and police force, education policy, collects own taxes. • ETA's legal political wing Herri Batasuna gained 18 percent of the vote in regional elections in 1998youth vote key • 2003 Batasuna banned under Spanish law for supporting terrorism

  9. 2006 Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's government began negotiations with ETA after the organization declared a "permanent" cease-fireTruce ends when ETA set off a bomb in Madrid's Barajas Airport killing two. • Zapatero's government takes harder lineno new peace process until ETA turns over its weapons or announced its dissolution • January 2011 ETA announced that it was declaring a "permanent and general cease-fire.” • From the declaration: a solution to the Basque conflict will come "though a democratic process that takes the will of the Basque people as its maximum point of reference, and dialogue and negotiation as its tools."

  10. ETA Today • Outside observers will confirm that ETA longer purchases weapons or engages in the extortion • Brian Currin, the international mediator who helped to achieve piece in Northern Ireland and South Africa: "This is what we've been waiting for…The fact that they have agreed to verification by the international community has huge implications."

More Related