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To: DollyCali
It is so nice to see a pix like this & know they are "ON OUR SIDE"..

Some of them, there is still some serious weeding out to be done I understand.

47 posted on 05/25/2005 7:20:08 AM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: Gucho; All

People inspect damage inside an office building after a powerful car bomb exploded in Madrid, Wednesday, May 25, 2005, following a warning call from the armed Basque separatist group ETA. Eighteen people were slightly injured in this latest of a string of explosions since Spain's prime minister offered talks with the armed Basque separatist group if it renounces violence. (AP Photo/Mariana Eliano)

Car Bomb Explodes in Madrid; 18 Injured

By DANIEL WOOLLS, Associated Press Writer

Spanish policemen inspect the area for clues after a car bomb exploded in Madrid May 25, 2005. A car bomb exploded in the Spanish capital on Wednesday, injuring three people, 45 minutes after a Basque newspaper received a warning in the name of (Sergio Perez/Reuters)

MADRID, Spain - A powerful car bomb exploded in Madrid Wednesday after a warning call from the armed Basque separatist group ETA, police said, in the latest of a string of attacks since Spain's prime minister offered talks with the group if it renounces violence.

Eighteen people were slightly injured, said Beatriz Martin, the city's emergency medical department spokeswoman. The explosion occurred around 9:30 a.m. in a working-class district north of the Spanish capital.

Police cordoned off the area where the bomb went off after an anonymous caller to the Basque newspaper Gara, which often serves as a mouthpiece for ETA, said a bomb would explode inside a Renault van.

Television images showed a large column of black smoke rising from the area of the explosion.

Spainish policemen inspect the area in search for clues after a car bomb exploded in Madrid May 25, 2005. A car bomb exploded in the Spanish capital on Wednesday May 25, injuring three people, 45 minutes after a Basque newspaper received a warning in the name of Basque separatist group ETA, police said. (Sergio Perez/Reuters)

Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, speaking in a previously scheduled Senate session shortly after the explosion, insisted that "the only fate that the terrorist group ETA has is to lay down weapons and dissolve."

Police estimated the bomb contained 40 to 44 pounds of explosives, Interior Minister Jose Antonio Alonso told reporters. "The explosion was really a big one," he said.

Alonso said ETA remains "alive, active and operative" despite the arrest of more than 200 suspected members in recent years.

He also said Spanish society is now rife with speculation over whether the government has already begun contacts with ETA — the government denies this — and insisted its fight against the group "would benefit tremendously if we all managed to lower this level of noise."

The blast was the sixth blamed on ETA since Zapatero announced earlier this month he was willing to hold talks with the separatist group if it renounced its decades-old campaign of violence.

Policemen walk past damaged cars at the scene where a powerful car bomb exploded in Madrid, Wednesday, May 25, 2005, following a warning call from the armed Basque separatist group ETA. Eighteen people were slightly injured in this latest of a string of explosions since Spain's prime minister offered talks with the armed Basque separatist group if it renounces violence. (AP Photo/Mariana Eliano)

The opposition conservative Popular Party has criticized Zapatero's initiative as a premature, unwarranted overture to what it calls an active terrorist group.

The party's spokesman in the Senate, Pio Garcia Escudero, said Wednesday's attack "does not look like a desire to negotiate but an attempt to exert pressure."

Four bombs exploded at industrial sites in the Basque region on May 15, two days after Parliament endorsed Zapatero's drive for the first talks with ETA since 1999. Two people were slightly injured. Last weekend another small bomb exploded in the Basque town of Zarauz. No one was hurt.

ETA had not been blamed for an attack in Madrid since February.

The group is blamed for more than 800 deaths since the late 1960s in a campaign of bombings and shootings aimed at creation of an independent Basque homeland in northern Spain and southwest France.

It has not staged a fatal attack since May 2003, and the government says the group has been seriously weakened by waves of arrests in recent years. Zapatero cites these factors as reasons for trying to launch a peace process even though ETA has not declared a cease-fire or made any other prior concession.

50 posted on 05/25/2005 7:34:55 AM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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