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juez garzón

ganaron con las armas pero no con la razón

artículo publicado en elplural.com
enlace: http://www.elplural.com/opinion/detail.php?id=45492

Esta semana se ha cumplido el 79 aniversario de la proclamación de la II República Española, sistema político legítimo y constitucional, derribado por las armas del ejército golpista del General Franco entre 1936 y 1939. Parece que ha llovido mucho desde esa época, y aunque lo haya hecho meteorológicamente, desde el punto de vista histórico, parece ser que tampoco hemos avanzado tanto.

En nuestro país cada vez es más evidente que el principal partido de la oposición (claro candidato a partido de gobierno) saca a relucir sus raíces, y se muestra como un partido política y sentimentalmente unido al Franquismo (sus fundadores eran reputados políticos de la dictadura). A veces, se nos olvida que la dictadura de Franco fue un régimen fascista, no por nada, sino porque cumplía todos los requisitos para serlo, ya que estaban suspendidas las Libertades Civiles, existía un partido único, se demonizaba a la Democracia, se disponía de un Sindicato Vertical, y se violaban los derechos de un pueblo mediante una fuerte represión y una brutal persecución política de las ideas y maneras de vivir. Estas características también las cumplían del mismo modo la Alemania de Hitler o la Italia de Mussolini.

Por tanto, que tengamos un PP (que se sustenta en gran parte sobre el franquismo sociológico) que pretende blindar las responsabilidades de nuestra última tiranía, es terriblemente peligroso. Es como si en Alemania, el principal partido de la oposición y con claras posibilidades de ganar las elecciones, fuese un partido llamado (supongamos) Volks Partei (fundado hipotéticamente en 1989 a partir de pequeños partidos de antiguos políticos de Hitler), cuyos fundadores de cabecera fueran destacados ministros nazis como Goebbels, Hess o Speer, y al frente del cual a modo de estandarte y como presidente honorario (como un tal Fraga en nuestro país) tuviesen a un todavía vivo y senil Joseph Goebbels, quien además durante los 90 gobernaba el Länder alemán de Renania del Norte-Westfalia, su tierra natal. ¿A qué choca? Pues esa de alguna forma parece que es nuestra triste historia.

Y que no nos vengan los populares con monsergas sobre Stalin o Fidel, ya que todos los demócratas condenamos el recorte de libertades y atropellos contra los Derechos Humanos de todas las dictaduras, y reconocemos a todas las víctimas, sean del color político que sean. Y más vale tarde que nunca: ya es hora de que Partido Popular condene al franquismo. Mientras esto no suceda, aún le quedan por recibir a los de Rajoy muchas lecciones de Democracia, de Política y de Derechos Humanos, pero muchas.

¿De qué sirve que a Rajoy se le llene la boca cuando habla de Derechos mientras niegan el derecho de miles de españoles a saber qué pasó y dónde están los restos mortales de sus familiares cercanos? De nada, simplemente sirve para evidenciar una vez más el grado de demagogia y falsedad que se gastan en Calle Génova, 13. ¿Es tan difícil que un supuesto partido demócrata como el PP condene una dictadura y apoye las aspiraciones legítimas de cualquier hijo de saber dónde está el cadáver de su padre? Hable claro señor Rajoy: ¿les niega ese derecho a millares de familias españolas?

Esto viene a evidenciarnos que la Transición a la Democracia en nuestro país aún no ha sido completada, y que necesitamos una Segunda Transición porque no todos los vestigios de la dictadura han sido depurados de las más altas instancias del poder. Del mismo modo que en la Primera Transición se normalizó el Poder Legislativo, se redactó una Constitución y se depuraron las Fuerzas Armadas, en esta Segunda Transición queda por reformar el Poder Judicial (descaradamente anclado en el pasado), y conseguir que todos los partidos con aspiraciones de gobierno por lo menos sean demócratas (para que nos den seguridad a todos los ciudadanos de que respetan las reglas de juego), y se desmarquen del Franquismo. Si un partido que puede llegar a gobernar no condena la violencia de nuestro régimen anterior, es normal que muchos sintamos miedo al tener dudas sobre el respeto profundo que puedan sentir estos señores por las libertades, la convivencia y respeto entre ciudadanos.

Es cierto que históricamente en España pesa mucho en que el fascismo venciera por las armas en 1939, y muriese plácidamente en un lecho con el poder político intacto. Pero este hecho histórico no puede servir para que esa victoria violenta de hace 6 décadas pretenda delimitar y encasillar nuestro presente y nuestro futuro, ya que eso ni convence (como dijo Unamuno) ni es razón política suficiente.

El acoso que está sufriendo Garzón es un atropello a las propias aspiraciones democráticas y a la Verdad en nuestro país, que está teniendo una respuesta firme y de asombro en el resto de los países democráticos (incluso se abre un proceso judicial en Argentina contra el Franquismo). La gente del PP, con Aguirre a la cabeza, no se conforma con perseguir y destruir a Garzón, sino que nos quieren negar la voz, nos quiere negar nuestro derecho a manifestarnos sobre este tema, y silenciar la memoria reciente de nuestro país.

La lideresa calificó el acto de apoyo a Garzón en la Complutense como un suceso antidemocrático, cuando ese acto es totalmente democrático porque está amparado por nuestra legislación, ya que tenemos Libertad de Asociación, Opinión y Manifestación. Además, la Universidad en toda Europa, señora Aguirre, es una institución autónoma del poder Político, sea del signo que sea, y lo es así para poder reflexionar, deliberar y discutir sin presiones de ningún tipo, aunque los gastos de la Complutense lo pague la Comunidad de Madrid, o los de mi Universidad lo haga la Junta de Andalucía. Si se le niega esta autonomía a la Universidad, estamos negando su razón de ser y su vocación de hacer avanzar el conocimiento y la civilización. Es evidente señora Aguirre, que no supo aprovechar en sus tiempos mozos su paso por la Universidad. Qué pena.

Ahora bien, lo que es antidemocrático, señores del PP, es querer encubrir los crímenes de la dictadura franquista y no luchar por los Derechos Humanos (de todos, para todos y universales) ya que contribuir a que se sepa la Verdad es construir Democracia. Lo que es antidemocrático, para más señas, es querer callar nuestras voces para que no sepamos qué pasó. Si creemos en las libertades, hay que empezar por reconocérselas a nuestros adversarios (Hitler reconocía la libertad de opinión, pero sólo a los que opinaban como él, igual que Franco). Y como creo en las libertades, señores del PP, defiendo con todo mi corazón y con todas las consecuencias, vuestro derecho a que digáis y expreséis lo que queráis, aunque sean fruto de la ignorancia o de la mala leche. Pero a cambio de vuestra libertad no queráis privarnos de la nuestra. Esa es la esencia del fascismo.

Alfonso Cortés González es profesor de la Universidad de Málaga

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Fascism is Alive and Well in Spain: The Case of Judge Garzon

publicado por Vicenç Navarro.
enlace: http://www.vnavarro.org/?p=3972&lang=en
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The fascist regime led by General Franco was one of the most repressive regimes in Europe in the twentieth century. It was imposed on the Spanish people by Hitler and Mussolini; without their assistance, Franco could not have defeated the popular forces that defended the democratically elected government of the Spanish Republic during the years 1936–1939.

The establishment of the Republic had opened up the possibility of making important reforms needed in Spain to respond to the demands of the popular classes.  The first democratically elected republican government instituted land reform (which antagonized the large landowners – the Catholic Church being among the largest); educational reform that expanded public education (antagonizing the Church, which controlled the educational system); and public pension reform (antagonizing banking). It also facilitated the organization of workers by encouraging trade unionism (antagonizing employers), reduced the number of top officers in the Armed Forces, and instituted many other highly popular changes. In response, the groups opposed to these reforms, led by the Army and assisted by troops and military equipment sent by Hitler and Mussolini, carried out a military coup.

The coup was strongly resisted by Spain’s popular classes, who fought for three years to defend the Republic, under enormous difficulties – the major one being the lack of arms (there was one gun for every three soldiers on the front). The Western democratic governments did not lift a finger to help the democratically elected government of Spain. As Winston Churchill said, the European governments were afraid that the popular reforms taking place in the new Republic would “contaminate” their own popular classes, who would then ask for the same changes in their own countries. So these governments chose to follow their class interests, Churchill said, over national interests. And, as history proved, this was the wrong choice. Their failure to assist the democratic forces in Spain only helped Hitler and later, in starting World War II.

Franco’s victory in Spain meant brutal repression. More than 200,000 men and women were executed, and another 200,000 died in fascist concentration camps and other places of detention. And 114,266 people simply disappeared. They were killed by the Falange (the fascist party) or by the Army, and their bodies were abandoned or buried without being identified (see my  “A Forgotten Genocide: The Case of Spain”).

Up until the last year of the dictatorship, 1978, repression was a constant in Spain’s fascist regime. Of course, apologists for that regime (coming from the fascist apparatus of the state) – such as Juan Linz, later a professor of political science at Yale – denied that Franco’s regime was a fascist totalitarian regime. They defined it as authoritarian, but not totalitarian, by which Linz (and Spain’s right-wing Popular Party, the PP) meant a regime that did not impose a totalizing ideology on the population. This claim is easily proven wrong. Spanish fascism was rooted in a profound and intense form of nationalism based, by its own definition, on a special race – the Hispanic race (the national day celebrating the conquest of Latin America was called the Day of the Hispanic Race) – that was chosen by God as the savior of civilization (this being rooted in a profoundly reactionary form of Catholicism) and led by a man of superhuman qualities, General Franco. The regime controlled all the country’s value-producing systems, from school tests to sports magazines. To deny the totalizing character of that regime, and how it controlled and imposed itself on all spheres of life, is plain apologetics.

The transition to democracy in 1978 was carried out on terms very favorable to the right-wing forces controlling the Spanish state, led by the king, who regarded Franco “as one of the greatest patriots in the history of Spain, savior of the nation against the Red forces”. A key element of the transition was the Amnesty Law, which called for immunity for all who had committed political crimes during the dictatorship. The law was accompanied by a Pact of Silence among the leaderships of all political parties, including the left-wing parties (the socialist and communist parties). As a consequence, the 114,266 disappeared remained disappeared.

Then, three years ago, the grandchildren of the disappeared (the desaparecidos) started looking for their bodies. Village by village, they began to search for them – a movement that immediately received huge popular support at the street level. There were people who knew where the disappeared were buried, but they had been afraid to talk about it, even thirty years after Spain’s return to democracy. The movement spread throughout the country, putting right-wing forces (and the old leadership of the left-wing forces) on the defensive. This movement has challenged the official perception and presentation of the change from dictatorship to democracy as a “model” transition. In fact, in this “model” transition, the right-wing forces still held enormous power.

The movement to recover the disappeared was instrumental in forcing a new law, approved by the Spanish Parliament, to break the Pact of Silence. The Law of Historical Memory calls for the government and public authorities to help families find the bodies of their loved ones. But the socialists in government (with the exception of the Catalan government, a coalition of three left-wing parties) have done very little to advance this. They are afraid of antagonizing the powerful forces (the monarchy, the Army, and the Church) that insist on the need to respect both the Pact of Silence and the Amnesty Law.

Enter Judge Garzon. This is the Spanish judge who tried to take General Pinochet to court when the general was in London, and who led the movement to take other Latin American dictators to court. He came under increasing pressure from the popular movement working for the recovery of historical memory in Spain to look at what had happened at home, not just abroad. Pinochet, after all, was a boy scout compared with Franco: General Franco’s repression was even more brutal than that carried out by his disciple, General Pinochet.

Finally, in response to this popular pressure, Judge Garzon called for an inquiry into the crimes committed by the Franco dictatorship, so as to hold tribunals and take those responsible for the horrors of that regime to court. It was a courageous and highly popular move. For the first time, an official report was prepared, by Garzon, documenting the extent of the repression under fascism in Spain. And, as it turns out, the repression was even broader and deeper than previously known. Many people had never spoken (even to their own children) of what they had seen and experienced during those years.

And, of course, the reactionary forces mobilized. There are very powerful forces in Spain that want to stop Garzon and punish him. The fascist party (La Falange) and other ultra-right-wing forces took Judge Garzon to the Supreme Court, asking that he be stopped from taking Franco’s regime and those responsible for the desaparecidos to the tribunals. And to everyone’s surprise, a member of the Supreme Court, Judge Varela, who had been assigned by this court to look at the fascists’ denunciation of Garzon, saw merit in their request: according to this judge, the Amnesty Law signed in the last days of the dictatorship gave permanent immunity to all who had committed violations of human rights under the fascist regime. This judge’s position increased the likelihood of Garzon’s being taken to the Supreme Court (a five-member court presided over by a judge who swore loyalty to the fascist regime).

It is interesting to read in Judge Varela’s indictment the way in which he justifies the need to take Judge Garzon to court. “[Garzon’s] actions seem to imply that there has been a pact of silence about the actions taken by the previous regime, exposing all the political and judicial systems to the criticism of having been insensitive to the defense of human rights and defense of the forgotten”. Judge Varela wants to prevent Judge Garzon from continuing his trial of the Francoist regime because it will reveal that there has been a pact of silence and that neither the state nor the courts have put into practice the recently passed Historical Memory Law and have done nothing in defense of the forgotten. In that way, Varela wants to save the honor of the Spanish state and the courts and avoid any further embarrassment to the very powerful forces responsible for that silence and for that democratic insensitivity. The initial work done by Judge Garzon has already proved not only the horrible crimes committed by the Fascist regime, but also the deafening silence during the 30 years of democracy. Judge Varela added that the Amnesty Law prevents any inquiry into the crimes committed during the dictatorship, ignoring the fact that the Spanish state has signed the United Nations Human Rights Law, which in Article 15.2 clearly states that the “crimes against humanity” cannot be silenced by national laws such as Spain’s Amnesty Law.

In a few days, the Supreme Court (chaired by a judge who swore loyalty to the Fascist regime during the dictatorship) will pass judgment on Garzon and most likely will divest him of his judicial responsibilities. To put this in perspective, what is happening is equivalent to the Supreme Court of Germany (presided over by a judge who swore loyalty to the Nazi Government) responding to the request of the Nazi Party and passing judgment on the only judge who had dared to try the crimes committed by the Nazi regime. This is what is happening in Spain. And the “official” international media remain silent.

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