Violence marks 5th day of protests in Spain
July 15, 1997
Web posted at: 2:09 p.m. EDT (1809 GMT)
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MADRID, Spain (CNN) -- The Spanish streets were calm Tuesday
after a night of emotional protests and sporadic violence
prompted by the killing of a young politician by the Basque
separatist group ETA.
A million people marched in Madrid and Barcelona Monday night
in the fifth straight day of demonstrations. Meanwhile,
independent reports said Tuesday that the ETA has threatened
to kill a second local politician.
ETA members kidnapped town councilman Miguel Angel Blanco
last Thursday, then fatally shot him in the head on Saturday.
Blanco's killing was the 10th ETA assassination this year.
The group had demanded the transfer of 500 Basque prisoners
from Spanish prisons to prisons in the independent region.
ETA has killed more than 800 people in a 29-year fight for
an independent state.
Blanco's killing marked a turning point in national attitudes
toward the ETA. Basques who once whispered their opposition
to the group in private are now screaming it in public.
While most of Monday's protests were peaceful, the public
backlash against the ETA led to sporadic violence overnight
in some Basque regions. In San Sebastian, more than a
thousand anti-ETA protesters hurled eggs and rocks at offices
and a bar used by the rebels' political wing, Herri Batasuna.
The people inside the bar retaliated with Molotov cocktails,
police said. At least two youths were injured and one person
was arrested.
With the majority of Spaniards standing firmly against
terrorism now, political leaders are working to ensure the
united front will last this time. In the past, parties have
split over how to fight the rebels.
The government is considering tougher penalties for terrorist
kidnappings, and quicker trials for young people who
vandalize Basque towns as a show of support for the rebels.
Some individuals linked to the Basque rebels have came out
against the killing of the councilman, but the Popular Unity
Party as a whole has refused to condemn it. It plans its own
large demonstration this weekend to counter the public outcry
against terrorism.
A new threat against the Popular Party, of which Blanco was a
member, came in the form of graffiti scrawled on a wall in
the Basque-dominated town of Renteria.
According to Reuters, the Spanish daily El Pais reported that
Jose Luis Caso, 63, would be the target of an ETA attack. He
is the only Popular Party (PP) official in Renteria.
"It's true that a new threat against a member of the PP has
appeared. We will reinforce all security measures," Angel
Acebes, the general coordinator of Prime Minister Jose Maria
Aznar's party, told reporters Tuesday.
Reporter Al Goodman and Reuters contributed to this report.
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