Terrorists Kill 190 in Madrid; Spain Blames Basques, Who Blame al-Qaida
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, March 11, 2004
Update: Tapes of Koran Found With Detonators
MADRID, Spain – Ten terrorist bombs that rocked three Madrid
train stations at the height of the morning rush hour Thursday
killed 190 people and wounded 1,200 others before this weekend's general elections.
Officials blamed Basque separatists
for the worst terror attack in Spanish history.
"This is mass murder," said a somber Prime Minister Jose Maria
Aznar after an emergency cabinet meeting. He vowed to hunt down
the attackers and ruled out negotiations with the ETA separatist
group.
"No negotiation is possible or desirable with these assassins
who so many times have sown death all around Spain," Aznar said.
The bombers used titadine, a kind of compressed dynamite also
found in a bomb-laden van intercepted last month as it headed for
Madrid, a source at Aznar's office said, speaking on condition of
anonymity. Officials blamed ETA then, too.
A U.S. intelligence official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "It's too early to tell.
We're not ruling anything out."
Panicked commuters abandoned bags and their shoes as they
trampled each other to escape the Atocha terminal, where bombs
struck two trains. Some fled into darkened, dangerous tunnels at
the station, a bustling hub for subway, commuter and long-distance
trains just south of Madrid's famed Prado Museum.
The bodies of the dead, some with their cellphones ringing
unanswered as frantic relatives tried to contact them, were carried
away by rescue workers. The wounded, faces bloodied, sat on curbs
as buses were pressed into service as ambulances.
One firefighter said he saw 70 bodies along a platform at El
Pozo station, just east of downtown Madrid. One corpse had been
blown onto the roof.
Ten bombs exploded in a 10-minute span along nine
miles of the commuter line, running from Santa Eugenia to the
Madrid hub of Atocha, killing 190 people and injuring more than
1,240, Interior Minister Angel Acebes said.
Police found and detonated three other bombs.
Foreign Minister Ana Palacio said there were indications ETA was to blame.
"Right now we have to wait until we have an official statement.
We don't have this official statement, so we just can say there are
some hints and indications that point toward ETA," Palacio told
BBC before Aznar spoke to the media.
Earlier, other politicians and media widely blamed ETA.
However, ETA's attacks have been on a lesser scale than Thursday's
bombings, with the largest toll being 21 killed in a supermarket
blast in Barcelona in 1987.
Basques Blame al-Qaida
A top Basque politician denied the separatists were at fault and blamed "Arab resistance." Many terrorists linked to al-Qaida
were captured in, or believed to have operated out of, Spain.
Arnold Otegi, leader of Batasuna, an outlawed Basque party
linked to the armed separatist group, denied it was behind the
blasts and suggested "Arab resistance" elements were guilty,
such as al-Qaida.
Otegi told Radio Popular in San Sebastian that ETA always phoned
in warnings before it attacks. The interior minister said there was
no warning before Thursday's attack.
"The modus operandi, the high number of victims and the way it
was carried out make me think, and I have a hypothesis in mind,
that yes it may have been an operative cell from the Arab
resistance," Otegi said. He noted that Spain's government
backed the Iraq war.
Until the latest attack, ETA had been blamed for more than 800
deaths in its decades-old campaign to carve an independent Basque
homeland out of territory straddling northern Spain and southwest
France.
On Feb. 29, police intercepted a Madrid-bound van packed with
more than 1,100 pounds of explosives, and blamed ETA. On Christmas
Eve, police thwarted an attempted bombing at Chamartin, another
Madrid rail station, and arrested two suspected members of ETA.
The Spanish national police said more than 170 people were
killed and more than 500 were injured.
The toll would make Thursday the deadliest day ever in decades
of attacks by ETA. Until now, the highest death toll was 21 killed
in a supermarket blast in Barcelona in 1987.
Socialists Meet With Terrorists
The attacks traumatized Spain on the eve of Sunday's general
election.
The campaign was largely dominated by separatist tensions in
regions such as the Basque country, with the ruling conservative
Popular Party and the opposition Socialists ruling out talks with
ETA.
But the Socialists came in for withering criticism because a
politician linked to the Socialist-run government in the Catalonia
region, which also has separatist sentiment, admitted meeting with
ETA members in France in January. The Socialists were lambasted as
allegedly undermining Spain's fight against ETA.
'Horror'
Rescue workers were overwhelmed, said Enrique Sanchez, an
ambulance driver who went to Santa Eugenia station, about six miles
southeast of Atocha station.
"There was one carriage totally blown apart. People were
scattered all over the platforms. I saw legs and arms. I won't
forget this ever. I've seen horror."
Shards of twisted metal were scattered by rails in the Atocha
station at the spot where an explosion severed a train in two.
"I saw many things explode in the air. I don't know, it was
horrible," said Juani Fernandez, 50, a civil servant who was on
the platform waiting to go to work.
"People started to scream and run, some bumping into each other,
and as we ran there was another explosion. I saw people with blood
pouring from them, people on the ground," Fernandez said.
Spanish officials had said ETA was against the ropes after the arrest last year of more than 150 members or collaborators in
Spain and France, including the leaders of ETA's commando network.
Last year ETA killed three people, compared to 23 in 2000 and 15 in
2001.
No arrests were reported Thursday.
"Those responsible for this tragedy will be arrested, and they
will pay very dearly for it," Acebes said at Atocha.
The government convened anti-ETA rallies nationwide for Friday
evening and announced three days of mourning.
'The Basque Heart Breaks'
"What a horror," said the Basque regional president, Juan Jose
Ibarretxe, who insisted ETA did not represent the Basque people.
"When ETA attacks, the Basque heart breaks into a thousand
pieces," he said in the Basque capital Vitoria.
"This is one of those days that you don't want to live
through," said opposition Socialist Party spokesman Jesus Caldera.
"ETA must be defeated," referring to the group as "those
terrorists, those animals."
In London, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw called the
attacks terrorist atrocities and a "disgusting assault on the very
principle of European democracy."
Straw said that Britain stood "shoulder to shoulder" with
Spain and was ready to send any kind of material help needed.
Elsewhere, European Parliament President Pat Cox said the bomb
attacks amounted to "a declaration of war on democracy."
"No more bombs, no more dead," Cox said in Spanish before a
hushed legislature in Strasbourg, France. "It is an outrageous,
unjustified and unjustifiable attack on the Spanish people and
Spanish democracy."
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