El blog del profesor Navarro
presenta el artículo que él ha publicado en la revista Counterpunch, la
revista progresista de mayor difusión en Estados Unidos. 31 de enero de
2012.
In 1936, a democratic government was
forced to face a military coup led by General Franco. The coup
succeeded because it had the support of the majority of the Spanish
armed forces which were well-equipped and supported by Hitler in Germany
and Mussolini in Italy. Without that assistance, the coup would not
have prevailed. The purpose of the coup was to stop the popular reforms
carried out by the democratically elected progressive government
opposed by the Church, banking community, finance companies, large
employers, armed forces, and the usual cast of characters that became
the major axis of the horrible dictatorship that was established at that
time in Spain and which lasted until 1978.
To ensure its survival, the dictatorship
required and maintained an enormous apparatus of repression carried out
by the Fascist party, La Falange, the armed forces and the Church. For
every political assassination Mussolini ordered in Italy, Franco killed
10,000, according to Professor Malekafis, expert in European fascism.
As a result of that fascist repression, Spain became the European
country with the largest number of people who disappeared due to
political assassinations. Even today, their families do not know where
they are buried. How can that be?
To be able to answer that question, it
is necessary to understand the enormous limitations of Spanish democracy
(1978-2011), the outcome of a transition from dictatorship to democracy
that took place during the period 1976-1978 under thedominance of the
ultra-right wing forces that supported and benefited from the fascist
state. The transition was based on a pact of silence, Ley de Amnistia,
according to which all political forces, including the left wing
parties, had to agree not to look at the past, that is, not to look for
responsibility or accountability for those terrible crimes committed
during the fascist dictatorship in Spain. That silence meant the
disappeared persons remained disappeared and their memory lost.
But the grandchildren of the disappeared
started asking what had happened to their grandparents and where they
were buried. They wanted to have a tomb they could visit and bring
flowers to once a year. And they wanted to pay homage to their fight for
freedom, the cause for which they were assassinated. In this way, a
popular movement began which demanded the Spanish state (supposedly a
democratic state) find the disappeared and honor them. The state,
governed then by the socialist party, resisted any response to that
demand, even though many of the disappeared were members and
sympathizers of that party in the 30s and 40s.
But responding to that pressure, Judge
Baltasar Garzón, who had become known internationally because of his
intention to judge the dictator Augusto Pinochet (an admirer of General
Franco and trained in the Spanish military school), started an
investigation and requested the state find the disappeared and pay
homage to those whose bodies had not yet been found. Judge Garzón soon
discovered the numbers were much higher than previously believed. The
numbers started with 30,000 and by the end of 2008 they had increased to
152,000. And still the numbers continue to grow. People began to lose
their fear and came out publicly with the names of their dead, proving
they had been assassinated, but not knowing where they had been killed
and where their bodies were. It soon became a mass phenomenon and the
numbers grew so large that many believe the killings of the disappeared
could be referred to as genocide.
As predicted, the right wing forces and
some voices within the left immediately mobilized, accusing Judge Garzón
of not respecting the Ley de Amnistia that was supposed to have put to
rest any possibility of judging these crimes. And none other than La
Falange, the fascist party, still legal in Spain, and other allied
forces brought Judge Garzón to the Supreme Court to stand trial. The
Supreme Court accepted the legal arguments and recently started
proceedings against Judge Garzón.
A few days ago, January 24, this judge
had to sit in front of the Supreme Court for daring to ask the Spanish
state to find and honor the disappeared ones and find those responsible
for their killings. It started a process unique in Europe at this time
where a judge defending human rights, freedom and democracy is put on
trial for upholding the honor and dignity of democratic forces. This
trial is an offense to all democratic persons in the world and a
mobilization of protest should occur worldwide against what is occurring
in Spain at this time.
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