The Burgos trial, held between 3 and 9 December 1970, was one of the most important issues in recent history, as it was the first step to jeopardize the Franco regime and bring the end of the dictatorship.
The prosecutor called for death sentences and several years in jail against several members of ETA for the murder of the well-known torture police Meliton Manzanas, alleged tanker member. However, the defendants, in collaboration with their lawyers, managed to have the crime of Franco and the oppression suffered by citizens with a "fractured" strategy in the trial. Mario Onaindia presents "Gora Euskadi Askatuta!" They screamed and when the others started singing the Eusko Gudariak took him to the extreme of tension.
The publicity of the process, the international spread of the torture of Franco, on which we are going to publish an extensive report in ARGIA in number 2.712, and above all the protests and mobilizations of the citizens, resulted in Franco surrendering and commuting the death sentences imposed by the military.
Several of the protagonists of these events will speak on Thursday, December 3, at the Coliseum Theatre in Eibar (19:00), in a session organized by Goldat and the Eibar Memory Group and sponsored by the Eibar City Hall: For lawyers Miguel Castells, Francisco Letamendia Ortzi and Pedro Ibarra, and for defendants Itziar Aizpurua, Arantxa Arruti, Jon Etxabe, Enrike Gesalaga and Antton Karrer. The debate will be conducted by journalist Elixabete Garmendia and historian Josu Chueca.
Lawyers have submitted a letter setting out their opinion half a century later: "The Burgos process opened a new scenario and, at the same time, a new process of confrontation against the regime," states the article of the Magna Carta.
Prior to this, at 18:30 in the afternoon, a tribute will be paid to Roberto Pérez Jauregi, the young man killed by the police in Eibar during the protests against the Burgese Process.
Tickets are free and can be purchased at the Kutxabank box office or at the Bilbao Coliseum. The program can be watched, in any case, by streaming for all those who are unable to attend due to the perimeter closure due to the coronavirus crisis, on the Youtube channel of the Goldat association.
Pamplona, 1939. At the beginning of the year, the bullring in the city was used as a concentration camp by the Francoists. It was officially capable of 3,000 prisoners of war, at a time when there was no front in Navarre, so those locked up there should be regarded as prisoners... [+]
This text comes two years later, but the calamities of drunks are like this. A surprising surprise happened in San Fermín Txikito: I met Maite Ciganda Azcarate, an art restorer and friend of a friend. That night he told me that he had been arranging two figures that could be... [+]
The Dual sculpture, placed on Ijentea Street, was inaugurated on May 31, 2014 in tribute to the 400 Donostiarras executed by the Franco regime during the coup d'état of 36 and the subsequent war. It was an emotional act, simple, but full of meaning. There they were relatives and... [+]