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Basque leader arrested in France

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Published Date: 19 April 2009
French police have arrested the suspected leader of Basque separatist group ETA as part of cross-border raids, Spain's Interior Ministry said.
He was among nine alleged ETA members arrested in recent days.

Jurdan Martitegi Lizaso, 28, was arrested on Friday in the small village of Montauriol in southeast France, the ministry said.

It was another blow to ETA, which has had to cope wi
th the arrests of three of its alleged leaders in less than six months and a wave of other detentions in France and Spain in recent months.

Martitegi allegedly took over ETA's leadership following the arrest of the previous suspected commander, Aitzol Iriondo, in December.

Martitegi was caught along with Alexander Uriarte Cuadrado, 27, and a third, unnamed, suspect, authorities said. Three guns, two cars -- one with false licence plates -- and suspected bomb-making equipment were seized.

Six other suspected ETA members were arrested in an operation in Spain's northern Basque region. They ranged in age from 25 to 31.

ETA has waged a violent campaign that has claimed more than 825 lives since the late 1960s for an independent Basque state straddling northern Spain and southwest France.

Iriondo was arrested in southern France on December 8, three weeks after his alleged predecessor, Mikel de Garikoitz Aspiazu, alias Txeroki, was caught in France.

France's Interior Ministry said five suspected ETA militants had been arrested in 10 days, including the three arrests on Saturday.




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  • Last Updated: 19 April 2009 1:18 PM
  • Source: scotsman.com
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: ETA
 
1

Marga,

Edinburgh 19/04/2009 18:45:24
This man is neither a Basque leader nor a separatist. When will British journalists stop this so-called politically correct but in reality deeply insulting (to the Spanish) treatment of ETA?
2

Observer,,

Glasgow 19/04/2009 19:18:10
Isn't it weird how the Scotsman restricts comments on stories about the killing of Ian Tomlison and other articles which could reflect badly on the British state but leaves open commentry on a story about ''seperatists''. Not.
3

Green Jock,

19/04/2009 20:06:08
Marga you`re right. British journalists (journalists from anywhere outside Spain) have a tendency to report ETA activity as work of brave innocent freedomfighters fighting against oppressors as though Franco was still alive. The Spanish Press was guilty of the same at the time the IRA was active though as the UK and Spain have had the biggest terrorism problems in Europe in last 40 years or so both countries probably understand problem more than most. Not sure Spain`s policy of banning groups that are sympathetic to ETA but get many votes is the right way (failed with UK government with Sein Feinn and can lead to bad press abroad which is the propaganda ETA want).

 

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