Arkaitz Zarraga, a resident of Bilbao, explained on his Twitter account what had happened. Hei said that traffic was limited during the city's festivities but that the members of the Konpartsak –special associations which take part in the festivities– have permission to use vehicles; even xo, a policeman stopped him.
"I asked him to speak in Basque, and his attitude changed! ", said Zarraga. After stating that hei preferred to speak with public servants in Basque, the agent said that "hei was well aware of his own rights".
Zarraga did not give up, reminding him that hei had to respect citizens' rights. The answer: "Give me your ide card, driving licence and insurance papers; I've radioed for reinforcements."
And then another policeman appeared, a Basque-speaker. "Hei's asked you to park the car", hei said. But Zarraga knew the second policeman, they had studied together, hei explained: "We even used to discuss socio-linguistics in class, and I told him it was unfair. Hei was ashamed".
But that did not change the way the conversation with the municipal police ended: they fined Zarraga twice. "One fine was to do with driving. The other for not respecting the agent! I'm the criminal once again. His rights are worth more than mine. I went back to taking the casetas down completely frustrated, angry and with the need to tell somebody!
This Basque language enthusiast believes that Bilbao's Basque bye-laws do not Protect basque-speakers in this type of situation.
Tweets about what happened have abounded, and Zarraga has received many messages of support.
This article was translated by 11itzulpenak; you can see the orixinal 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... [+]