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Two weeks ago, the UPN (Union of the navarran People, the Navarran branch of the PP) denounced that extortion letters had been sent by ETA to Navarran entrepreneurs after the ceasefire. It turned out that the letters were likely sent in February (dated "March") to four entrepreneurs politically close to the independentists, and in a complicit, non-threatening tone.
This week, there were two cases of "street violence" (in one of them, a business belonging to a UPN member was burnt down). The UPN claimed that the attacks had been ordered by ETA (it has long been established that street violence in the Basque country by nationalist youth is often not spontaneous, and is part of a campaign called Kale Borroka or "street fighting"). The president of the regional government of Navarra (UPN) went as far as to say that he had evidence of this from the security forces, but had to retract his statements yesterday after the central government came out strongly saying there was no evidence the attacks had been ordered by ETA. Batasuna even deplored the attacks in public statements (which is unheard of). A society committed to the notion that government is always bad will have bad government. And it doesn't have to be that way. — Paul Krugman
The article I quoted mentioned "Mr Zapatero has now completed his round of meetings with representatives of all parliamentary parties following the announcement of the ceasefire, whom he thanked for their unanimous support and trust." Is that an overstatement in your opinion?
Zapatero is expected to go before the Congress of Deputies in june and claim that "according to intelligence and the security forces" the activities of ETA have come to a complete standstill. He will then seek a vote authorising him to "talk" to ETA. A society committed to the notion that government is always bad will have bad government. And it doesn't have to be that way. — Paul Krugman
Expect the Navarran campaign in 2007 to be vicious, with UPN running on a single point: that the rest of the parties intend to for a coalition to sell Navarra off to ETA. A society committed to the notion that government is always bad will have bad government. And it doesn't have to be that way. — Paul Krugman
This is modern dance at it's best now all more comprehendible with your deciphering!! Thanks Migeru.
I think ZP is very smart and he would not get into it unless he knows exactly where he is going...and by the way, he has ver good intelligence...spanish intelligence on terrorism is brilliant...better than what the US could ever imagine...so I think he already knows what moviments will be harder for ETA and for Batasuna to make. Accepting a new confederal statute as the maximum aspiration is probably not the toughest thing for them to accept, since this is the maximum they are going to get.....filtrations that the status of Navrra could be the toughest pill to take for ETA may explain this movement of pieces in Navarra....but after all Navarra is the only confederal territory in Spain..what would they like to change their status?
A pleasure I therefore claim to show, not how men think in myths, but how myths operate in men's minds without their being aware of the fact. Levi-Strauss, Claude
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