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Thousands demand transfers for ETA prisoners in Basque protest

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Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in the Basque Country on Saturday demanding that prisoners linked to the former armed separatist group ETA be transferred to jails closer to the northern Spanish region.

In the city of Bilbao, protest organisers said some 76,000 people rallied along the streets calling for prisoners to be moved nearer to home and for an amnesty.

Spanish government policy has been to keep most ETA prisoners in jails hundreds of kilometres away from the region, which has made it difficult for relatives to visit.

After coming to power in June last year, a month after ETA disbanded, Spain's Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez pledged to start reversing the policy.

A second protest of around 9,000 protesters took place in Bayonne, in French Basque Country, calling for the prisoners to be moved.

But Spanish conservatives and some relatives of ETA's victims fiercely resist this, arguing prisoners should first repudiate the group -- which few have done -- before they can be allowed closer.

A banner in Basque reads
A banner in Basque reads "Come back home" during a demonstration in the northern Spanish city of Bilbao to demand the transfer of ETA prisoners to jails near their homes
ANDER GILLENEA, AFP

ETA killed more than 800 people and wounded thousands more over four decades of conflict in an attempt to establish an independent Basque state.

Currently, 265 people are in prison over their links to ETA, 46 of whom are in France and one in Portugal, says Urtzi Errazkin of Etxerat, an association of prisoner families.

A large majority of ETA prisoners are also kept under the strictest "first degree" jail regime which only allows them out in the yard for three to four hours a day and bans them from getting leave.

Since Sanchez's announcement, 19 have been or are in the process of being transferred closer to home, a spokeswoman for Spain's prison authority told AFP.

But only two have been sent to the Basque Country after repudiating ETA.

Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in the Basque Country on Saturday demanding that prisoners linked to the former armed separatist group ETA be transferred to jails closer to the northern Spanish region.

In the city of Bilbao, protest organisers said some 76,000 people rallied along the streets calling for prisoners to be moved nearer to home and for an amnesty.

Spanish government policy has been to keep most ETA prisoners in jails hundreds of kilometres away from the region, which has made it difficult for relatives to visit.

After coming to power in June last year, a month after ETA disbanded, Spain’s Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez pledged to start reversing the policy.

A second protest of around 9,000 protesters took place in Bayonne, in French Basque Country, calling for the prisoners to be moved.

But Spanish conservatives and some relatives of ETA’s victims fiercely resist this, arguing prisoners should first repudiate the group — which few have done — before they can be allowed closer.

A banner in Basque reads

A banner in Basque reads “Come back home” during a demonstration in the northern Spanish city of Bilbao to demand the transfer of ETA prisoners to jails near their homes
ANDER GILLENEA, AFP

ETA killed more than 800 people and wounded thousands more over four decades of conflict in an attempt to establish an independent Basque state.

Currently, 265 people are in prison over their links to ETA, 46 of whom are in France and one in Portugal, says Urtzi Errazkin of Etxerat, an association of prisoner families.

A large majority of ETA prisoners are also kept under the strictest “first degree” jail regime which only allows them out in the yard for three to four hours a day and bans them from getting leave.

Since Sanchez’s announcement, 19 have been or are in the process of being transferred closer to home, a spokeswoman for Spain’s prison authority told AFP.

But only two have been sent to the Basque Country after repudiating ETA.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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