Basque group ETA gives authorities list of weapons caches

Inactive for more than five years, ETA had said it would hand over its arms, a historic step following a 43-year violent campaign that claimed 829 lives, mostly in Spain.

April 08, 2017 04:38 pm | Updated 04:38 pm IST - PARIS:

French police officers collect plastic bags at a hideout used by Basque separatist guerrillas ETA in Saint Pee sur Nivelle, southwestern France, on Saturday. The armed Basque independence group ETA, inactive for more than five years, is to hand over its arms Saturday, putting a finishing touch to a 43-year violent campaign that claimed the lives of 829 people mostly in Spain.

French police officers collect plastic bags at a hideout used by Basque separatist guerrillas ETA in Saint Pee sur Nivelle, southwestern France, on Saturday. The armed Basque independence group ETA, inactive for more than five years, is to hand over its arms Saturday, putting a finishing touch to a 43-year violent campaign that claimed the lives of 829 people mostly in Spain.

The Basque separatist group ETA has formally given French authorities a list of eight locations of its weapons, ammunition and explosives in a crucial move toward disarmament.

French Interior Minister Matthias Fekl said a police operation was underway on Saturday to find and search the arms caches.

“It’s a great step, an unquestionably important day,” Mr. Fekl said.

Representatives of the self-appointed Peace Artisans activist group, acting as mediators in the disarmament process, told reporters that the total number of weapons included 120 firearms and three tons of explosives and ammunition.

“We hope that with this the movement can move forward to a long-lasting peace in the Basque country,” Mixel Berhokoirigoin said.

The International Verification Commission, in charge of verifying the process, said in a statement Saturday that the list of caches communicated to them by the Peace Artisans group “was immediately conveyed to the relevant French authorities, who will now secure and collect ETA’s arsenal.”

Inactive for more than five years, ETA had said it would hand over its arms, a historic step following a 43-year violent campaign that claimed 829 lives, mostly in Spain.

Disarmament is the second-to-last step demanded by France and Spain, which want ETA to formally disband. The organization hasn’t said whether it would do that.

A spokesman for the ruling party in the Basque Country’s regional government in Spain called the disarmament “historically relevant.”

“It’s important that the disarmament takes place because each and every [weapon] has its history,” Joseba Egibar said, as reported by Europa Press. “It’s the history of who carried them and the pain and suffering of so many years.”

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