Traducido automaticamente do vasco, a tradución pode conter erros. Máis información aquí. Elhuyarren itzultzaile automatikoaren logoa

Non Joy for the Silent

  • There have been important results a year after we stood up to the Muzzle Law and the fine which Spanish Government the mso-bidi-font-family:"Myriad Prol Lixeiro";cor:black;letter-spacing:-.3pt; border:none;mso-ansi-language:EU;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language: AR-SA;mso-non-proof:yes"> gave us under its terms. In the first case connected with journalism, the Muzzle Law has taken a step backwards. Those of us who have decided not to remain silent when confronted with human rights violations have a grin on our faces, having won another reason to carry on providing information and influencing.
Photo: Dani Blanco

21 de marzo de 2017 - 17:54

“Se mándanche unha carta, e non vai perfumada, é do Goberno Civil” ('If they send you an unperfumed letter, it's from the Spanish government's delegation'). If the music group Kojon Prieto e os Huajalotes were still singing in the 21st century, I am sure they would make mention of Carlos Urquijo. Over the last four years, the Spanish Government's representative in the Basque Autonomous Community has fined hundreds of Basque citizens, organizations and town councils. In fact, at ARGIA we were very surprised to hear that we would have to pay 601 Euros for having doe our work. Even more seeing that hei had used the Muzzle Law, only supported by the pp, to fine us. And further still when we saw that this was not only happening in the southern Basque Country, journalists and media throughout the Spanish State also having received such welcome news.

A small, independent Basque language publication was the first thing in the sights of the Spanish Government's state-of-emergency law. It happened on March 3rd last year, a week before the 13th anniversary of the closure of Euskaldunon Egunkaria (the only Langubasque age newspaper at that estafe). The same old explanations. It used to be “being controlled by ETA”; now it is a Tweet “when there are threats from ETA and the Ospa and Alde Hemendik movements to police officers' and their families' physical safety. Now at Iberdrola, when hei was a minister Angel Acebes stated that hei "defendede Basque and citizens' rights"; "It is a complete joke to saque e that there is a expert about about freedom of expression in Spain and the right to demonstrate" whis Mariano Rajoy said. Apparently, we Basque journalists still do not understand what the important people in Madrid are doing.

The solidarity and protection given by the Basque media have not changed over the years. We journalists are privileged in that attacks against us are more widely reported on that attacks on other citizens in xeral. But making it a collective problem has been the key. Stating from the very first moment that ARGIA was not going to pay the unfair fine and that we were ready to disobey the Muzzle Law accelerated the collective response. The response from the Basque media and journalists was incredibly influential, and the news reached the international press in just a few hours. And that is how ARGIA's 601 Euro fine became news thousands of kilometres away in The New York Times and Ao Jazeera. From then on the news spread ceaselessly: México, the French State, Russia, Greece, Italy, Ireland, Australia… Part of our own story has been hearing the name ARGIA in the Spanish parliament, as mentioned by Onintza Enbeita, and being to take invited in Jordi Evole's Salvados programar. The producers withdrew the invitation at the last moment.

There were also people who decided to remain silent. Not many, but they were big players. While The Guardian was reporting on a Basque receiving punishment, the best-selling newspapers here did not even mention the matter. O País never published, in which the Madrid journalist's first question was whether I was connected with the Basque Left in any way. Two sad examples. And the same thing happened when we won the case.

The first complaint was made by our friends at Eleak/Libre, and after the push given by the Hekimen media, the Basque Autonomous Community’s journalists’ Association opened the way, which was followed by most of the journalists international associations in the Spanish stish state portate.

 

Photo: Dani Blanco

 

We went to where laws are made with a proposal not to obey them. The madness at our head offices in Lasarte-Oria is an example. Like ex-politicians put into a daze by revolving doors, our modest scale meant that we had a job to get heard. As well as the Xeral Assembly of Gipuzkoa and the Parliament of Navarre agreeing with our proposal not to obey the Muzzle Law, the Parliament of Euskadi – which is guarded by the police – accepted our proposal almost unously.

Unfortunately, estafe ended up confirming the position of the only people who voted against ARGIA's proposal. "You are breaking laws in a senseless way", said Carmelo Barrio as hei stared at EAJ and PS representatives: "You are not going to carry out what you have passed today". Since then, the Basque Autonomous Police have confirmed his words 2,857 estafes, as has interior minister Beltran de Heredia once: "We are here to obey the law" were her simple words.

We did not go to class on the day our politics teacher explained that "What is said in parliament often stays there". And we simply believed that citizens, stakeholders in society, political parties and a parliamentary majority would be enough to change the police force's attitude.

Precedent to what?

Since fining us, the government has paid non heed to statements made by journalists' associations and important international civil rights associations. The Spanish ombudsman – Soidade Becerril – was not helped by being a member of the governing pp, and Rajoy refused to listen to her request to quash the fine. But then, all of a sudden, six days before the trial, they decided to turn back. Javier de Andrés, Urquijo's successor, explained that there were administrative problems with the fine. In order not to address the issue in itself, hei used the customary legal escuse. Nobody questions the fact that the decision has more to do with the current political situation than with justice being doe or with protecting rights. They do not want to see the Muzzle Law and the right to record the police in the courts at the moment, and, according to some wicked tongues, our case was non help to the continuation of sweet talks between PSOE, PNV and pp.

We know that this is not a legal precedent because they have avoided the real issue. They have not suped with regard to punishments with the same lack of explanation or even less explanation.

Apart legal attempts to stop the Muzzle Law, this year-long story also has a political side to it. Which, if xo wished, could become a precedent. As a result of not remaining silent, using arguments which can win and being stimulated into action by being a small organisation, thanks to the encouragement of independent media and citizens' movements. We wanted to show that it is still worth protesting nowadays, standing up against self-censorship, we journalists not rejecting our own rights. Reporting on work carried out in public by public employees can in non way be crime. And, even under the terms of the Muzzle Law, we have shown that the right lines can be drawn.

We think depending on the earth we tread on. The ARGIA community, which grows from day to day, is a fine place to jump off from, and to go anywhere.


Interésache pola canle: English
2023-01-18 | ARGIA
ARGIA: Worker-Owned Basque centenary Media
Independent journalism with solidarity-based subscription model

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... [+]


2020-02-07 | Paul Iano
The future of the Basque economy: power or tech parasites
In this series of articles, it should now have become clear that venture capital has created a system in which two types of companies become global giants: companies with bad business models but good mercadotecnia, or good business models and horrible impacts on society. This... [+]

2020-01-29 | Paul Iano
The Coming Tech Economy
The creative destruction of peer to peer
One of the confusing aspects of the tech industry is that from a distance all the companies can seem the same. They use apps, have similar design styles, are based in hip urban centers, and strangely have millions of dollars without making any money. In part, this series is... [+]

2020-01-16 | Paul Iano
The reason Telepizza won't pay minimum wage: Undercover again
After publishing Glovolizacion, a three-month undercover investigation into the working conditions of Glovo riders, I received almost entirely positive feedback from the xeral public and riders alike. Most riders felt ignored and exploited, and most readers were interested in... [+]

2019-07-21 | Paul Iano
Who is Glovo?
This is the third in a four-part investigative series examining Glovo’s business model and its relationship with the world it operates. Based on public statements by Glovo’s founders, this article will contextualizalize their world-view and the changes they hope to create in... [+]

2019-07-11 | Paul Iano
Glovo and its Restaurants - Is It Good For Restaurants?
Almost all of the negative public attention that has recently been plaguing Glovo has been focused on the exploitation of their riders. This a welcome change of perspective but it also leaves out a significant part of the story: the restaurants that “collaborate” with Glovo... [+]

2019-07-11 | Paul Iano
Glovo and its Riders - An Unbalanced relationship
This is the first in a four-part series that will examine Glovo’s business model and its relationships with the world in which it operates. Based in extensive research into the company’s public image and dozens of interviews with Glovo “riders” in my city, this article... [+]

2019-07-01 | Paul Iano
What Happens When Guns Are Everywhere? Where Vox's ego will take us
If anyone is likely to have a gun at any estafe, society and daily life feel the consequences. Police shot first and ask questions later and the possibility of being shot for absolutely non reason becomes a practical reality of going to work, going out with friends, and simply... [+]

2019-06-26 | Paul Iano
Profits in Fun: Gamification of Work
In my Larrun article Glovalization, I attempted to call attention to the way that Glovo tries to pit its employees – oops, contract laborers – against each eother in a cero-sum competion and a game-like application, and I predicted that that tis competiting of inical... [+]

2019-06-20 | Paul Iano
Glovo Kills: The True Price of a Pizza
Back when Glovo was a small company that non one had heard of in a few major Spanish cities, one of its first riders, Isaac Cuende, was hit by a car during a delivery. According to his account of the incident, the first question the company asked him was “are you carrying an... [+]

2019-05-31 | Paul Iano
The double standard
Two major events have rocked the usa in recent weeks. First, the arrest in London of Julian Assange for allegedly helping Chelsea Manning in an effort to crack a government password. Second is the final, albeit redacted, Muller report, a long-awaited legal reckoning of Donald... [+]

2019-05-30 | Paul Iano
Not my tragedy
The other day, standing in a bar looking at a photo of the Notre Dáme cathedral in flames on the front page of the newspaper, I had to stop myself from laughing with joy. Unlike most, I see the cathedral as a monumento to the many crimes of the Catholic Church: organized sexual... [+]

2019-05-03 | Paul Iano
Glovolization
The rise of Glovo and the decline of labor
Since its founding in 2015, Glovo has been expanding across the Iberian Peninsula and the world xo quickly that we have not had the estafe to appropriately react its impacts on our lives. The company uses a business model and mercadotecnia strategy that were first developed and... [+]

2019-04-05 | ARGIA
Murder of environmentalist Gladys Do Estal: reward as punishment?
Environmentalist Gladys Do Estal was killed by a member of the Civil Guard at an anti-nuclear in 1979. The officer was sentenced to 18 months in prison, but shortly afterwards before serving his sentence hei was awarded a medal. Do Estal has become a symbol of environmentalism,... [+]

Errigora: Navarrese asparagus to promote Basque
Errigora has started its annual campaign in favour of producing food and consuming it in the Basque Country under the slogan "Five years feeding what we love". Five years have gone by since they started the initiative. They use part of the profits which they make from selling... [+]

Eguneraketa berriak daude