Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Neo-Nazi?
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/13/europe/EU-GEN-Spain-Right-wing-Rally.php
Right-wing rally gets go-ahead in Spain despite fears of violence
The Associated Press
Published: November 13, 2007
MADRID, Spain: A Spanish court has given the go-ahead for a far-right rally this weekend despite tensions after a fight between leftist and rightist gangs left a teenager stabbed to death, officials said Tuesday.
The demonstration will commemorate the killing of Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera in 1936 by leftist forces during the Spanish Civil War.
For decades the anniversary has served as a rallying point for small numbers of people nostalgic for the authoritarian rule of former dictator Gen. Francisco Franco, who died in 1975 after 40 years of hard-line government.
Primo de Rivera founded the Falange, the political movement associated with the Franco regime.
Annual events, including the anniversaries of the deaths of Primo de Rivera and Franco deaths, have attracted sympathizers carrying Franco-era flags — and, more recently, banners bearing anti-immigration slogans.
Madrid's regional government initially banned the rally because it considered its slogan — "Assassinated by Socialists" — provocative enough to trigger violent clashes, Justice Ministry spokesman Enrique Lopez told The Associated Press.
Rally organizers withdrew the slogan and reapplied for permission, and Madrid's provincial court ruled the rally could go ahead.
"In Spain we do not criminalize political thinking, however radical. It only becomes illegal when ideology actively supports violence," Lopez said.
The rally is going ahead despite a fight Sunday between far-right and antiestablishment gangs who clashed with knives, gas dispensers and other weapons inside a subway station in Madrid. A 16-year-old boy with the leftists was stabbed in the heart, and died. Eight other people were injured in the clash.
Police said they had wanted to ban the upcoming rally to avoid a repeat of such violence.
The demonstration is to include a march to the Valley of the Fallen, a massive monument housing the tombs of Franco and Primo de Rivera 54 kilometers (34 miles) northwest of Madrid.
Sorry CNN, but the Yolk was the symbol of the Catholic Monarchs...not somehow a nazi symbol.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
¡Viva españa! ¡Arriba españa!
The song isn't to Franco, but the Falange.Rallies banned at Franco's mausoleum
Paul Hamilos in Madrid
Thursday October 18, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
The basilica in which General Franco is buried will no longer be used to
hold political rallies in celebration of Spain's former dictator, according to a
new law to be voted on at the end of the month.
The foundation that runs the
Valley of the Fallen, a vast memorial to Franco topped with a giant cross
visible for miles around, will also have to provide information on "all of those
who died during the civil war and who suffered repression", not just the victims
of the republicans.
The Valley of the Fallen, in the Guadarrama valley north-west of Madrid,
remains a shrine for the small band of followers who still openly support
Franco. But if the new law is passed, they will no longer be permitted to meet
there on the anniversary of his death, when they gather to sing "Cara al Sol",
or "Face to the Sun", the anthem to Franco.
Between 1940 and 1958,
republican prisoners were forced to build the mausoleum under Franco's orders,
and the underground crypt was declared a basilica by Pope John XXIII in 1960.
The change in status of the Valley of the Fallen is one of a number of
amendments made today to the historical memory law, one of the most
controversial pieces of legislation in Spain's 30 years of democracy.
First
proposed by the Socialist government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero last year,
the law has been fiercely opposed by the conservative People's party (PP). In a
surprise move yesterday, The PP supported the amendment on Franco's mausoleum,
but continued to express their opposition to the law. The PP's general
secretary, Angel Acebes, described it as the result of a process intended to
"divide rather than unite the people of Spain".
It was also announced that
the grandchildren of those who were forced into exile, or chose to leave Spain
during the dictatorship, will be able to apply for Spanish nationality. Until
now only those whose parents were born in Spain could apply for citizenship.
According to the governing PSOE, this amendment will affect around 1 million
people, who will have a two-year period from 2009 within which to apply.
Last week it was confirmed that Spain would ban all public references to the
Franco regime, with all statues, street names and symbols associated with the
dictator to be removed. Those churches which still have plaques commemorating
Franco and the victims of his republican opponents risk losing state aid if the
refuse to remove them.
· This article was amended on Friday October 19 2007.
Pope John XXIII rather than Pope John Paul XXIII was Pope in 1960. This has been
corrected.
Nonetheless, the communists have regained control, and it's about time there's another revolution led by another Generalissimo! Let's hope Catholicism will overcome Communism once again.
¡Viva españa! ¡Arriba españa!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQcSTGz3XyY



