From the BBC:
“Franco: Spain seeks to
transform monument into civilian cemetery”
The Spanish government plans to
turn a monument to fascist dictator General Francisco Franco into a cemetery
for people who died on both sides of the Spanish Civil War. The removal of the
monument is part of proposals aimed at redressing the wrongs of the late
dictator. The left-wing coalition government wants victims - now buried in
unmarked graves - to be identified. Franco ruled Spain from 1939 until his
death in 1975. He was buried in a vast mausoleum called the Valley of the
Fallen, just outside Madrid. His remains were moved to a low-key grave last
year, 44 years after his elaborate funeral. "The more than 30,000 victims
of both sides will have peace and respect from all there," Deputy Prime
Minister Carmen Calvo said. The Law on Democratic Memory, proposed by Socialist
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez last week, will also prevent publicly funded
groups from glorifying Franco. It will seek to overturn sentences from
political trials under Franco and will strip people of titles granted by the
dictator. The draft could still be amended over the coming months and the law
requires parliamentary approval. 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. The site
has been a focal point for Franco supporters and a shrine for the far right.
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 repression carried out afterwards, are still missing.
^ Spain continues to move very
slowly when dealing with the Franco Dictatorship and its victims. From
1977-until 2007 it kept its head in the sand with regards to any crimes
committed by Franco and his supporters and even today they can’t seem to get
together to fully address Franco and what he and his supporters did in Spain for
36 years. ^
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