Historical Manifesto of the PSOE considers the law of Democratic Memory "an unfair misrepresentation and alien to the historical truth"
Politics The Democratic Memory Law fuels the debate between the two Spains
The Democratic Memory Law that condemns the Francoist regime as illegal, annuls its political sentences, recognizes the victims of the
Civil War
and the dictatorship, commits the State to the search and exhumation of thousands of people buried in ditches and mass graves, has obtained the green light from
Congress
with the support of the two government parties - PSOE and United We Can - which have been joined by Bildu, PNV and various minority formations.
The law, in addition, by imposition of the
abertzale
group accepted by the PSOE, extends the suspicion of Francoism and violation of human rights until December 31, 1983, five years after the approval of the
Constitution
including the first year of the Government of
Philip Gonzalez
.
It has been precisely the additional provision of Bildu, incorporated in exchange for their votes, which has tarnished, in the eyes of the opposition, a legal text originally intended to unite but which in the end has ended up dividing and whose days could be numbered if in the next general elections the Government changes sign.
The PP has already announced its intention to repeal it from the first minute if it manages to reach
Moncloa
.
The bill, which will now go to the
Senate
and could be definitively approved in September, has not had the support of
ERC
,
BNG
,
JxCAT
and the
CUP
.
The first two forces have opted for abstention and the second two for the vote against.
For all of them, the key to their position lies in the fact that the law does not repeal the
Amnesty Law
of 1977, which they call the law of impunity or full stop.
The debate prior to the vote on the text has been a harsh exchange of accusations and reproaches, an example of irreconcilable differences, to the point that the Minister of the Presidency, Félix Bolaños, went up to the rostrum after the representatives of the political groups to point out "what the law says and not what some say the law says."
In his intervention, the minister highlighted the best aspects of the law and recalled that to recognize the victims of terrorism there is already another law approved practically unanimously.
To this he added that the one that now obtains the approval of Congress will not serve for any terrorist to enter the category of victim.
His words have not convinced the main opposition forces for whom the law is "miserable" and "disgusting", an "infamy" and a "perversity" because it has been agreed with the "heirs of ETA" excluding, they affirm, of democratic memory, the hundreds of victims of terrorism, torpedoes the harmony of the
Transition
and even "insults Felipe González".
The intervention of the representative of Bildu,
Bel Pozueta
, has come to add salt to the wound of the division.
The deputy confirmed that the objective of her amendments is none other than to investigate and do justice with respect to Francoism "in its widest extension", that is, extending the scope of the law until the end of 1983.
He also emphasized that for its formation, the 1978 Constitution "did not open a period of peace and democracy for all and did not end the violation of rights."
In addition, he was in charge of highlighting the transfer of the
Palacio de la Cumbre
to the
San Sebastián City Council
to turn it into a monument of memory, a building he said, "where the young Basques
José Antonio Lasa
and
José Ignacio Zabala
were tortured ."
For the opposition, however, it is a sectarian and biased law that "uses the memory of the dead for the benefit of the political interests of the living," in the words of Cs deputy
Guillermo Díaz
.
A law that, from now on, according to the PP, will be remembered as the "Bildu law" or "totalitarian memory law", a "frontal attack on the Transition".
The
popular
have summoned the PSOE to explain if among the monuments dedicated to memory they will include, in addition to the Palacio de la Cumbre, the dungeon in which
José Antonio Ortega Lara
was kidnapped for more than 500 days .
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