From the BBC:
“Franco exhumation: Spanish
dictator's remains moved”
The remains of Spanish dictator
Francisco Franco have been moved from a vast mausoleum to a low-key grave, 44
years after his elaborate funeral. Thursday's long-awaited relocation fulfils a
key pledge of the socialist government, which said Spain should not continue to
glorify a fascist who ruled the country for nearly four decades. His family
unsuccessfully challenged the reburial in the courts. After the remains were exhumed in a private ceremony,
family members carried the coffin out of the basilica of the Valley of the
Fallen, a national monument carved into a mountain about 50km (30 miles) from
Madrid.
Why is Spain moving a dictator's
remains?
Franco's remains were then loaded
on to a helicopter and transported to a private family vault at a cemetery in
Madrid, where they will be re-buried next to his late wife. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the
exhumation was "a great victory for dignity, memory, justice and
reparation - and thus for Spanish democracy". Only a few people were allowed to attend the
event, which is taking place under high security. They include the justice
minister, an expert in forensics, a priest and 22 descendants of Francisco
Franco. Media are excluded but more than 200 journalists are near the site. A
crane was needed to lift a concrete slab weighing 1,500kg that covered the
coffin. In total, the exhumation and re-burial will cost about €63,000
(£54,000; $70,000).
Why is Franco being moved?
The Valley of the Fallen houses
more than 30,000 dead from both sides of the 1936-39 Spanish Civil War, in
which Franco's Nationalist forces defeated the Republican government. It was
partly built by political prisoners, whom Franco's regime subjected to forced
labour. Thousands of those killed by his forces were interred there without
their families' consent. The site has been a focal point for Franco supporters
and a shrine for the far right. Visitors were able to lay flowers and say
prayers at the late dictator's tomb. The government wants the site to become
"a place of commemoration, remembrance and homage to the victims of the
war". It sees the presence of Franco's remains there as an affront to a
mature democracy. He was moved to the El Pardo cemetery, where various other
politicians are interred. The family are not allowed to drape the national flag
on his coffin but have brought along the same flag that covered Franco's coffin
at his 1975 funeral.
Do Spanish people support this?
The burial place of Franco has
been the subject of fierce debate for decades and Spaniards remain divided over
whether his remains should be moved, newspaper polls suggest. An El Mundo poll
this month said 43% supported the move, with 32.5% against and the rest
undecided. Franco supporters gathered
outside the El Pardo cemetery where he will be re-buried Many descendants of Franco's victims are happy
that action is finally being taken. "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 were the saviour of Spain," Silvia
Navarro, whose great uncle died in 1936, told the BBC. But critics have accused
the government of playing politics ahead of an election next month. About 100
Franco supporters gathered outside the El Pardo cemetery on Thursday to protest
the exhumation.
What's the Franco family's view?
Franco's grandson, Francisco
Franco y Martinez-Bordiu, said he was furious with the government. "I feel
a great deal of rage because [the government] has used something as cowardly as
digging up a corpse as propaganda, and political publicity to win a handful of
votes before an election," he told Reuters news agency. Last month, the
Supreme Court rejected an appeal by Franco's family against the exhumation. It
also dismissed a proposal for an alternative site. The family, who would rather
he were not moved at all, wanted him to lie in a family crypt in the Almudena
Cathedral - in the centre of the capital. But 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.
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. 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.
^ It only took the Spanish 44
years to remove their dictator's body from his grave shrine. It took the
Soviets 8 years to remove Stalin's body from his. Hopefully now the Spanish
will stop glorifying Franco and his crimes. ^
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