Basque leader Arnaldo Otegi: 'Independence will provide us with the tools for advancing alternative social policies'
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (or ETA, “Basque Homeland
and Freedom”) a Basque independence movement on April 8 put a definitive end to
its campaign of establishing an independent socialist Basque state through
armed struggle. In a statement bearing the organisation’s seal and initials,
the group declared itself a “disarmed organisation”,
praising the work of Basque civil society and existing Basque institutions in supporting
the peace process, while condemning the Spanish and French authorities for what
they perceived to be “stubbornness” in not allowing the group to lay down its
weapons. ETA
was first founded in the late 1960s by members of the youth section of the
Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), the traditional
political force within the Basque independence movement. Facing severe
repression from Franco’s fascist
dictatorship, it saw the armed struggle as the most efficient way to
destabilise the Spanish state and resist the armed occupation of the Basque
lands. The
group received popular support and recognition for its armed campaign to bring
down Franco’s dictatorship, particularly for the 1973 assassination of Spain’s Prime
Minister and Franco’s perceived successor, Luis Carrero Blanco. However,
following the dictator’s death and the period of political “Transition” from a military
dictatorship to a constitutional monarchy, a number of splits occurred within
the organisation, revolving around the question of the continuation of the
armed campaign. In
the late 1970sETA formally separated into two distinct factions -
ETA (military) and ETA (political-military). The former maintained the military
structure and the vision of an independence movement based on the same methods
as used
during
Franco’s era. The latter, while maintaining support for the armed struggle, saw
a greater potential in achieving the goal of a Basque state by legitimate
political means, taking part in the elections throughout Euskal
Herria (i.e. the traditional Basque regions in Spain and
France) and the Spanish parliament, and promoting the ideology of the Abertzale (i.e. patriotic and
pro-independence) left within Basque society and institutions. The
political-military faction of the organisation dissolved in 1986 and, together
with other Abertzale left organisations in the Basque country,
created political and electoral structures, the most prominent of which wasthe Herri
Batasuna political party which eventually dissolved to form
part of the Batasuna political coalition in 2001. They have
sought to rival the traditional political force within Basque politics, the
centre-right Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), by simultaneously advocating fornational
independence and economic and social policies associated with the Abertzale left project -
nationalisation of key industries (particularly energy companies) and banks,
higher taxes on the rich, opposition to nuclear energy, support for refugees
and solidarity with other national liberation causes and movements within Spain
and around the world (particularly in Catalonia, Galicia, Ireland, Palestine
and Kurdistan). Due
to Batasuna’s previous association with ETA, the
right-wing Popular Party (PP), together with the centre-left Spanish Socialist
Workers Party (PSOE), have consistently pressured the Spanish Constitutional
Court to ban the party, based on the allegations that the Abertzle left formations didnot condemn the
violence committed by the armed group. In 2002, the Spanish parliament passed
the Law of Parties aimed at facilitating the outlawing of Abertzale left formations on
the grounds of their refusal to disown ETA. This was despite the fact that the
PP, the perceived successor of the Franco’s political movement, has never had
to condemn
atrocities
committed by the Francodictatorship, while the PSOE actively
promoted the use of government-funded death squads and paramilitaries
throughout the 1980s (commonly known as GAL or “Anti-terrorist Liberation
Groups”) against ETA andBasque citizens within Spain and Basque
refugees in France. One
of the other most important outstanding questionsremaining after the
disarming of ETA isthe continued imprisonment of around 350
ETA members and political figures connected with the Abertzale left, currently
dispersed around Spain and France asa deliberate method of separation from
their families. Arnaldo Otegi Mondragon has been one the
most prominent leaders within the Abertzle left movement,
serving as the founder and President of Batasuna from 2001 until its
dissolution in 2013, and, most recently, as the General Secretary of Sortu, the successor to Batasuna, and the spokesperson
for EH Bildu (Basque Country Unite) Abertzale
political
coalition. A former member of ETA (political-military), he has been imprisoned
numerous times by the Spanish State, most prominently from 2009 to 2016, for attempting to
organise the Batasuna political organisation,found by the Spanish
Constitutional Court to be associated with ETA.Despite enduring torture at the hands of
Spanish Civil Guard, and witnessing numerous splits and fights within the Abertzale
movement
itself, Otegi has continued playing a key role in the peace negotiations
processes (most prominently in 2006), persuading the military wing to
eventually abandon its armed operations. Below, Otegi speaks to Denis Rogatyuk for Links International journal of Socialist
Renewal. **** The
definitive disarming of ETA took place on April 8. Does this amount to an
admission that ETA’s armed struggle has been counterproductive for the movement
for Basque independence? Arnaldo Otegi: We need
to put the dynamics of ETA’s disarming into context. I see it in terms of a
cycle of change that has taken place all over the world: in the last decade or
so most of the movements that had been carrying out armed struggle have been
giving up this sort of strategy in order to become movements of popular
resistance, movements for building social majorities and democratic majorities
in parliament. I
think we are seeing the end of a long global cycle with the passing of
outstanding figures like Fidel Castro, Hugo Chávez, Manuel Marulanda and Martin
McGuiness, and that’s the context in which I think the disarming of ETA, a
group that has carried out armed struggle for 50 years in our country, has to
be seen. We are very pleased that this is the case, we are very convinced—not
only in political terms but also in terms of revolutionary morality—that in
building the road forward to overcoming our condition as an oppressed people,
we have to ensure peaceful and democratic methods. We think that this is the
pathway, and I believe that ETA has risen to the challenge by making an
historic contribution to the independence movement with its own disarming. Obviously,
nobody can avoid recognising the level of suffering that the armed struggle and
government repression have brought to our country: that’s the reality and it
must be understood. We have brought to the discussion three things we’ve done:
the removal of the armed struggle from Basque politics; the recognition of the
damage done; and the recognition that we too are in part responsible for the
suffering in the country. In
the context of that large cycle of changes in strategy across the world I think
that this has been the contribution of the Basque independence movement up
until now. On the issue of ETA political prisoners, the
Spanish state seems to be happy to let them rot in jail, and there is currently
no political force within Spanish politics strong enough to change that
situation. Where do you feel this struggle is going? I
think we have said quite clearly, adopting as our own the international
principles and standards of conflict resolution, that once ETA has disarmed,
the issues of the prisoners, the exiles and the demilitarisation of the country
have to be confronted. In our country, we have one policeman for every 20
inhabitants, the highest in Europe: they are Spanish police and the Civil
Guard. I
believe there are two levels on which the conditions of the prisoners should
change with disarming. There’s the non-political level, covering prisoners of
an advanced age or with severe illnesses: from my point of view they should be
released unconditionally, it’s a humanitarian issue beyond politics. I put the
issue of the Basque political diaspora on the same level. Then,
once ETA has disarmed we should start discussions among the various progressive
political forces about how to start reviewing all state-of-emergency
regulations insofar as they affect prison policy. I think that will be the next
step and here we can work with sections of the Spanish left—with a lot of
patience, discretion and caution so we don’t hurt certain sensibilities. I
believe this is the way to make some progress in resolving these issues. In the Basque region today, there’s a
significant left social presence and a political majority that seeks
self-determination. What steps do you think Sortu should take to combine these
majorities into one? Within the Basque country, there is large
majority in favour of self-determination, with 57 MPs out of 75 [in the parliament
of the Basque Autonomous Region in Spain]. And out of these, between our 18 and
Podemos’s 11, we have 29 in total, putting us ahead of the 28 of the PNV
[Basque Nationalist Party]. So it appears that we have a broad majority for the
right to self-determination and a broad progressive majority as well. However, the question is not one of trying to
create a single political and ideological amalgam out of these majorities. What
we should be putting on the table are possible common alliances and dynamics so
that our policies in national terms move forward towards sovereignty and the
exercise of the right to self-determination while policies on day-to-day
concerns shift leftwards: this is the work that Sortu and EH Bildu have to do. At the Sortu Refoundation Congress in
January, the party defined itself as “ecological”. What meaning does this have
for you? We have always declared ourselves to be
ecologists, and always have been, but now I believe that this description has
even greater validity and topicality. We are aware that right now capitalism in
a very difficult predicament is weakening the conditions supporting human life.
For the first time the human footprint is putting at risk the very biological
and material conditions of human life: that’s one of the legacies that savage
capitalism has brought us. That’s why we understand that when we talk about
economic growth, and about sustainability and all the rest, the emphasis has to
be on respect for nature, on how we human beings relate to nature. We have a long tradition here of fighting
against nuclear power plants and nuclear energy, a long tradition of struggling
to keep our natural landscapes intact and that is why Sortu also had to declare
itself as socialist, feminist, and ecologist. Because we understand that at a
time when capital is putting life at risk and when probably the greatest
contradiction in the world is the contradiction between capital and life, then
we have to make a clear commitment to re-launching and intensifying our
ecological profile. Today environmentalism is one of the most important
components of global anti-capitalism. In January, at the Rosa Luxembourg
conference in Berlin and at the Sortu refoundation congress in Bilbao, you
outlined your vision for the need to create progressive and revolutionary
coalitions and forums against neo-liberalism and fascism across Europe and the
world. What practical steps need to be taken to achieve that? For some time now, we—and me in
particular--have been asserting the need for something, I don’t know if it’s a
new international or a world-wide forum, because we are accused of being
nationalists but we always say we are not nationalists, we are supporters of
independence. There’s a mountain of problems in the world and the worse ones,
the structural ones, can only be confronted on a global scale or at least a
European scale. I think that as left-wingers, progressives, people who belong
to political parties or unions, we need a functional forum in which to tackle
these problems. I always put forward as an example what
happened in Greece. Greece faced the Troika [European Commission, European
Central Bank and International Monetary Fund] and everybody looked away as if
it was only a Greek concern, while we, who were in jail at the time, were saying
that that fight was everybody’s fight against savage capitalism and that the
Greek defeat was a defeat for all of us. What we missed while in prison and what we
still miss now is when is there going to be a Europe-wide general strike
against austerity policies. These sorts of demands need to be put to a
global-scale, at least European-scale, forum that can start to tackle these
issues: not so much a forum for theoretical debate but a practical forum that
can develop answers on a global scale. We are going to make the effort to raise
this thinking wherever we are—with our small forces and with great humility—but
we really think it is necessary to move forward in this area. Nearly all nationalist movements have their
left, right and centre. There are a lot of movements for self-determination in
Europe that are led by right-wing forces (e.g. Flanders Union, La Pen in
France, Lega Nord in Italy). How does Sortu and the broader abertzale
left relate to them? We do not have any kind of relation with the
National Front, nor do we have any sort of relationship with those who those
who put forward xenophobic policies or nationalist policies of the right. We
have had some relations with the groups from Flanders, but this was based on
the historic factors of the exiled Basque communities that have been based in
Belgium and maintained relations with Flemish nationalists, but we certainly do
not follow the same ideological vision nor do we have the same vision in terms
of social goals. For us, the biggest priority is to construct left-national
alliances. We have good relations with left-wing movements from around the
world, because for us, we do not form part of the nationalist movement but
rather of the pro-independence movement. We believe that independence will
provide us with the tools for advancing alternative social policies: demanding
national and popular sovereignty means a fight over that ground with the
oligarchies who have hijacked our democracy. We have never shared the policies nor the
xenophobic proposals against immigration that have been raised by the
right-wing populist movements that sometimes remind us of the 1930s decade and
which we consider highly dangerous; among other things because they have stolen
some of the banners of the left, because their social messages are similar to those
of the left-wing, but who we already know represent the same oligarchy while
putting forward simplistic but totally dangerous policies. Instead, we, the [Catalan] People’s Unity Lists
(CUP) and other political groups think that you can only move forward in terms
of popular sovereignty if you build instruments of sovereignty in order to
carry out different social policies, that can be anti-neoliberal. We have
always claimed that the independence for the Basques or Catalans is in the
interests of the great majority of people and workers. This is why, for
example, Basque trade unionism in its majority supports Basque independence.
It’s also why we are proud to observe processes like those in Scotland and
Catalonia, which, when they call for people’s support for the cause of national
sovereignty, always accompany that call with a commitment to advanced social
programs. It’s not hard to grasp. If you want the support
of the workers of Glasgow or of the Barcelona industrial belt, or of Bilbao,
you need to have advanced social programs. Sovereignty processes always look to
the left because this is where they can build majorities and for that you need
advanced social programs. We know that when we start the Basque independence
process the ones who will be heading it will be the trade union majority in
this country. Recently, there’s been growing collaboration
between the two main Basque nationalist trade unions LAB [Patriotic Workers
Commissions, aligned to the abertzale left] and ELA [Basque Workers
Solidarity, aligned with the conservative Basque Nationalist Party]. Given
their history of competition for the support of the Basque nationalist workers,
what would be the basis for a single union confederation? You have to bear in mind that these are trade
union movements that come from absolutely different cultures, even though over
time they’ve begun to converge. For us collaboration is basic because they form
the Basque trade union majority—a broad majority in the four regions of the
country[1] — and from our point of view any sovereignty process has to have in
its front ranks the Basque trade union majority playing an increasingly leading
role. I believe that these processes of convergence
could take place over time, but it would be very premature to speak of a single
Basque trade union confederation even though collaboration between both unions
has certainly been growing recently. I’m convinced that this collaboration is
going to become more intense and grow both quantitatively and qualitatively. I
hope that above and beyond the difficulties and the dynamics of trade union
competitiveness that you can have in factories and businesses the pursuit of
sovereignty and alternative social policies is there as a common goal for
everyone. I believe that in time the Basque unions will
be able to start assuming that leading role and stand for the demand for
sovereignty and statehood for this country. From that point forward, broader
levels of collaboration will be able to start being built and maybe we will be
able to move towards a future where the Basque trade union majority forms a
kind of single left and pro-independence trade union confederation, but I think
there’s a lot to be done before that happens. We see a new generation of activists within
Sortu - more young people and women within its leadership ranks. How do you see
the party building the movement among the youth today, especially with regards
to Basque language, folklore and culture? We have been able to achieve an almost 100%
renewal of our leadership, making way for a new generation in which we [the
historical leadership generation] are forming a sort of bridge between the
generations and that is highly satisfying. Firstly, because there’s a
generation taking over the tasks of leadership within which there are many
women; secondly, because we’ve done the job without big internal ructions.
We’ve done the job well, explaining it to the people, and I think that being
able to do what we’ve done is an example rarely seen on the left around the
world. Our people, our youth, men and women, have a
basic attachment to our country’s signs of national identity such as folklore
and Basque culture. However, at the same time we’re very conscious that the job
of expanding and broadening the social base of the movement for independence
requires most of all very advanced social programs. We don’t believe that a
Basque social state can be built only on the basis of the demand for national
identity: it has to be done on this basis too but it can’t be the only one—the
pro-independence proposal for statehood has to be accompanied by an advanced
social program. I believe the young people understand this very
clearly, they know what has to be done and that’s calming for us. Our young
people are going to instil a new political culture, that of expanding the
social base of the independence cause beyond the national question by
emphasising the issue of a very advanced social program for the country and
thus allowing the emergence of new broad majorities. The situation that we see today in the
Spanish state is certainly different than the one seven years ago: the People’s
Party (PP) is in a minority government, the Spanish Socialist Workers Party
(PSOE) is in a deep crisis, while Podemos and the alliances in which it
participates is constantly pushing the government on various issues. The
Spanish state resembles a rotting stake, which, if pulled from different sides
could fall. So if the Catalan movement pulls hard from one side, and you pull
hard from another, could the stake finally fall and progressive change arrive
to the whole country? I think that the Spanish state is going through
a serious structural crisis: the foundations that the post-Francoist regime
used to build the country in 1978 are in deep crisis. For various reasons:
first, because the global financial and economic crisis has called into
question the economic viability of the country. Second, because Catalonia has
started a process that will bring them to the national independence, and third,
because the abertzale left and the Basque pro-independence left have
changed their strategies, leaving Spain without an internal enemy. Thus, I think there is a way to make a
significant change in terms of democracy: supporting the constituent processes
that Catalonia has been heading and which we want to start in our country. We
cannot forget that the key to the 1978 regime is the defence of Spanish unity,
its domination is built on this idea. For this reason, Catalonia has the
importance it has, and this is why we also want to initiate an independence
process. If we accompany this with a real dynamic of the Spanish left-wing
proposing a multinational state and demanding respect for the right to decide,
all this might come together in a change in the regime, a real democratisation.
But we are not very hopeful about that, since the People’s Party (PP), Spanish
Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) and Citizens—the parties of the regime—are still
in a majority in the Spanish state. That’s why we say we have to follow our own
pathway wherever possible: in Catalonia and the Basque Country. You have gone through so much in your
personal struggle—prison, torture, fights within the movement (political and
physical), but you don't seem to have lost your humanity. How do you keep
smiling despite all of what has happened? Because, in the end, I am an anthropological
optimistic, as Zapatero [former PSOE prime minister of Spain] would say. I
consider that we cannot falter; the road forward is still the road forward, the
goals are still the goals, the objectives remain what they are. I think that a
left-wing project must be founded on profound human values, right? I think
that’s something the left lost sight of some time ago, but that it is something
we need to recover. That’s why I am optimistic and I am convinced that most
people in this country will commit themselves; and we will overcome obstacles,
prison and torture. Overall I am an advocate of always maintaining the smile;
we have to fight and win without losing our smile, since ultimately what we are
doing is proposing a better society for everyone. We don’t fight for ourselves, we fight for the
people. And I think the best compensation is when people stop you in the street
and thank you for your effort and work. The left has a treasure—setting the
example and being coherent: if we lose example and coherence, we lose
everything. I usually say in my meetings that we don’t go
on to boards of management when we finish in politics, but that we have a much
greater compensation that that: popular affection, the affection of the people,
and it’s the affection of the people that keeps us smiling. Notes [1]
The four territories of the Southern Basque
Country within the Spanish state are the three provinces of the Basque
Autonomous Community (Euskadi), namely Álava (in Basque, Áraba),
Guipúskoa (Gipuskoa) and Viskaya (Bizkaia), plus the autonomous
community of Navarra (Nafarroa).
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