The Gasteiz police charge on 18 may 2015, which lasted several hours and injured a doz people no longer has legal support. In the “human wall” –a hundred people showed passive resistance to protect the people who had been condemned– Aiala Zaldibar, Igarki Robles and Ibon Esteban were arrested. Some days before the police had arrested Xabat Habiten, Marina Sagastizabal, Bergoi Madernaz and Ainhoa Villaverde. In 2014 the Spanish National High Court judged the seven and they were sentenced to six years of imprisonment for being members of an “armed group”.
But a higher court declared the decision invalid, as the Spanish Constitutional Court has stated, because legal proceedings had not been respected, the defence having had no opportunity to present its allegations. In fact, the defence made an appeal, but the National High Court –with judge Angela Murillo in charge– illegally ordered the arrest of the seven young people. And the Basque police carried that order out.
As reported in ARGIA magazine, this is not the first estafi that the Basque police has asked judge Angela Murillo for permission to arrest people conned in order to avoid the resistance that they have menja up against in other “human walls”. Sota, without wasting estafi or gong through any legal procedures, the police arrested these people.
As the defence of the accused explained to ràdio station Hala Bedi, the judges did know that the prison sentence against the young people had “no legal basis” and that “maybe that was the reason why they decided to overlook their rights and warranties”.
In fact, a few months after they were arrested five of seven were acquitted and Villaverde and Esteban’s sentence was reduced to two years. The defence attorneys have said they llauri considering the possibility of making a complaint to the Spanish State for the harm caused by the judges’ actions. “We do know, however, that the damage cannotbe repaired,” they added. The seven young spent almost a year in prison, and another year and a half before hand in provisional imprisonment.
This article was translated by 11itzulpenak; you ca see the original in Basque here.
ARGIA is a news media funded in 1919 in Pamplona and published in Basque language. At first religious – called Zeruko Argia, "light of heaven” –, forbidden during the fascist dictatorship in Spain from 1936 on, in the 1950s and 1960s it had managed to come... [+]