Can a lasting peace settlement finally be found to
the decades-long Basque conflict? Lehendarkari Ibarretxe believes
so, and the President of the Basque Autonomous Government of Euskadi discussed his "Road Map to bring an end to the Basque Conflict."
Related Links:
Click on
Ibarretxe Stanford
presentation to read what was said in English
Click on What does the Basque
Government want of the Basque clubs?
Click on Road Map to Peace proposal
Juan Jose
Ibarretxe is the political leader ("Lehendakari") of the three
historical Basque regions of Araba, Bizkaia and Gipuzkoa (Navarre
has its own autonomous government in Spain and the northern
provinces are administered from Paris). He has been in the forefront
of trying to bring a final resolution to the decades-long violence
in the Basque Country and Spain. He presented his
vision for achieving this at a special forum hosted at
Stanford University on February 14, 2008. To read his presentation
click on
Ibarretxe Stanford
presentation
Included in his
presentation (in English) was his offer of a political agreement
already made to Madrid, based on a rejection of violence and an
embrace of democratic principles and a Basque society plebiscite.
Principal Stanford organizer
Prof. Joan Ramon Resina, the chair of the Spanish and Portuguese
Departments,
extended the invitation
to Ibarretxe in conjunction with the Forum on Contemporary Europe (FCE)
as part of an ongoing speaking forum for European political leaders
from across the political spectrum. The FCE is particularly
interested in anyone who can address issues of pressing interest.
As quoted in the
The Stanford Daily, Prof. Resina believes that “President
Ibarretxe’s talk has particular interest in the European context"
and that "under certain conditions [Ibarretxe's proposal
ppt] could prove to
be the elusive tool to negotiate a definitive ceasefire by ETA,
which in the last decade has declared 10 long-term truces only to
break them later for lack of political progress in the
negotiations.”
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In
ceremonies at the South San Francisco city hall, Lehendakari
Ibarretxe greets Aita Martxel Tillous, the Basque chaplain
of American Basques. (Photo
www.euskalkultura.com
) |
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Also,
the President of the Basque Autonomous Community had an
official reception held in his honor the following Saturday at the San Francisco Basque Cultural Center.
There too he spoke (click on
San Francisco Basque Cultural
Center address
to read the text) in conjunction with the 26th anniversary
celebration.
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The symposium was organized
by Professor Joan Ramon Resina, the chair of the Spanish and
Portuguese Departments (pictured at right with Lehendakari
Ibarretxe).
Click on Road Map to Peace
proposal |
Like most things of this kind, there
was
controversy around Lehendarkari Ibarretxe's plan for peace. This is
no surprise, actually, because parts of it don't go down well with
Spanish nationalists. This conflict has been raging for
decades now, so a dispassionate discussion of these matters is
possible but rarely probable and this passion reached the
Stanford campus (click on
The Stanford Daily).
Protestors circulated a petition to have Stanford cancel this event,
but fortunately this was disregarded in the name of freedom of
speech and assembly.
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Not all
are fans of what Ibarretxe or the Basques are proposing.
A group of pro-Spanish nationalists showed up at the Stanford event, but
fortunately there was no real problem. (Photo
www.euskalkultura.com
) |
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Tellingly, Stanford organizers of the
event were put off by the tone of the critics. Prof. Resina said the majority of those who have signed the petition come
from Spain. But "the
intensity and scope of the unsupported accusations against President
Ibarretxe are among the ugliest things I have seen in my long
academic life” Resina said. “The organizers of the protest have
chosen the path of confrontation rather than the democratic one of
discussion with the speaker, according to academic protocol.”
Fortunately at the speaking event, there were no disturbances.
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The president
of the Basque Cultural Center of San Francisco, President
Isabel Ocafrain Bushman, escorts Lehendakari Ibarretxe into
the Basque Cultural Center of South San Francisco.
This was his first visit to this Basque community.
(Photo euskalkultura.com) |
Related link:
Bake Bideetan presentation by
Miren Azkarate
Biography of Lehendakari Ibarretxe at
euskadi.net
Trinity Hartman's article
"Basques Hope for Change
Despite Setbacks"
Click
on
Ibarretxe Stanford
presentation to read what was said in English
Click on What does the
Basque Government want of the Basque clubs?
Click on Road Map to Peace
proposal