From the BBC:
“Franco exhumation: Spain's
Supreme Court backs move to cemetery”
Spain's Supreme Court has ruled
that the remains of dictator Francisco Franco should be exhumed. It backed the
Socialist government's plan to move the remains from a state mausoleum to a
less controversial site. An appeal by Franco's family against the exhumation
and proposing an alternative site was rejected. The issue has divided opinion
in Spain, which remains haunted by the Franco era. He won the 1930s civil war
and went on to rule Spain until 1975. In a unanimous ruling, the court said it
had decided to "completely reject the appeal lodged by the family in
relation to Francisco Franco's exhumation". In a tweet (in Spanish), Prime
Minister Pedro Sanchez hailed the decision as a "great victory for
democracy". Mr Sanchez's deputy, Carmen Calvo, said the exhumation would
be completed "as soon as possible". The government wants to carry it
out before elections on 10 November. Franco currently lies in a huge mausoleum
called the Valley of the Fallen, alongside tens of thousands of civil war dead.
Many revile the complex - just outside Madrid - as a monument to the triumph of
fascism, and it has become a shrine for the far right. The government approved
the exhumation in August. It plans to
put him next to his wife in El Pardo cemetery north of Madrid, where various
other politicians are interred.
Why Spain's government wants to
exhume Gen Franco's remains
Many descendents of Franco's
victims support the move. "The idea that people who were killed by
Franco's troops are buried together with Franco, it's very absurd, and they're
still glorifying him as if he was the saviour of Spain," Silvia Navarro,
whose great uncle died in 1936, told the BBC. But the family, who would rather
he was not moved at all, wanted him to lie in a family crypt in the Almudena
Cathedral - right in the centre of the capital. The government argued that the
former dictator should not be placed anywhere where he could be glorified. It
also said there were potential security issues with the cathedral site. The
controversy comes at a time of political crisis in Spain, as the country
prepares for its fourth general election in four years.
Possible boost for the Socialists
This was a resounding ruling in
favour of the Spanish government, with the Supreme Court unanimously approving
the exhumation. Just as noteworthy was
the court's rejection of a claim by the Franco family that if the exhumation
should go ahead, the remains should be reburied in a crypt beneath Almudena
Cathedral in central Madrid. Although
the family could now go to the Constitutional Court, many observers believe
another appeal would not succeed. The government, which has seen its plan to
exhume Franco repeatedly delayed, will now aim to carry it out as soon as
possible. There are some, relatively
minor, hurdles still to overcome, such as securing the Catholic Church's
co-operation, but if Franco's remains are moved by 10 November it would give
the Socialists a boost in the general election to be held that day.
What has been the reaction to the
ruling?
Mr Sanchez said the government
had always been guided by the determination to alleviate the suffering of
Franco's victims. "Today is a great victory of Spanish democracy," he
said. "The Supreme Court has
endorsed the exhumation of Franco's remains and his transfer to El Pardo.
Justice, memory and dignity." Pablo Iglesias of the leftist Podemos party
said the move was a "very important step" to remove a shame which had
been present despite 40 years of democracy. But Santiago Abascal, leader of the
far-right Vox party, said he would oppose the Supreme Court decision
"because only Vox has the courage to defend freedom and common sense from
totalitarianism and electoral propaganda tricks". Meanwhile, a spokesman
for the main opposition Popular Party said he did not intend to devote any time
to the question. "I have no
opinion... I respect the procedures of the courts," Alfonso Serrano said,
quoted by Efe news agency.
How has Spain dealt with the
Franco era?
Unlike in Mussolini's Italy and
Nazi Germany, defeated in World War Two, Spain's transition to democracy in
1975 was more gradual. Though democracy
is well established now, many believe the country has never faced up to its
fascist past. There was an unwritten "pact of forgetting" during the
transition. An Amnesty Law adopted in 1977 prevents any criminal investigation
into the Franco years. Statues of Franco were removed and many streets were
renamed, to erase obvious signs of the fascist past. A Historical Memory Law, passed in 2007 by the
socialist government at the time, recognised the war victims on both sides and
provided some help for surviving victims of Franco's dictatorship and their
families. But the work to locate and
rebury thousands of civil war dead has been slow and controversial. More than 100,000 victims of the conflict, and
the ferocious repression carried out afterwards, are still missing.
^ Hopefully Franco’s body will
now just be removed from his shrine and buried elsewhere. This is a long 44
year issue that needs to be dealt with and finished with right now. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49807372
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