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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

James Badcock

Basque ceasefire offers Zapatero illusion of a lifeline

September 6, 2010 by James Badcock Leave a Comment

The latest ETA ceasefire has the look of a Trojan horse. All previous truces have ended in a return to bloody violence by the Basque terrorist organisation. But in Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero’s mind, a little spark of optimism has surely been reignited at a time when he and his governing Socialist Party are in desperate need of a positive development. Yes, that very “optimism” which Zapatero expressed just hours before ETA ruptured its previous ceasefire, detonating a car bomb at Barajas airport and leaving two dead in late 2006. The prime minister has since spoken of his upbeat attitude towards the peace talks in Switzerland of that autumn as his biggest mistake. But … [Read more...] about Basque ceasefire offers Zapatero illusion of a lifeline

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: 2006 ETA ceasefire, Basque country, Basque peace process, ETA, ETA ceasefire, izquierda abertzale, popular party, rajoy, socialist party, Spain 2011 budget, spain budget deficit, zapatero

Ideology is first casualty of Spain’s economic crisis

August 30, 2010 by James Badcock 1 Comment

The day José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero’s dream ended was not even marked by a speech from the unlikely new champion of glum realism. As Congress in Madrid debated in late May cutbacks effectively imposed by Frankfurt and Brussels, the Spanish prime minister, who had tended his very personal flame of optimism with so many smiling words, saw his political future turn to ashes without even taking the stand. The Socialist who had vowed to bring the benefits of economically successful Spain to the disadvantaged now looked on as Catalan nationalist Antoni Duran i Lleida announced that his bloc would save the government in the vote to cut public workers’ wages and freeze pensions, but declared that … [Read more...] about Ideology is first casualty of Spain’s economic crisis

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: austerity package, economic crisis, G20, recession, Spain and Greece, spain pensions, spain recession, spanish economy, Spanish elections, zapatero

Morocco edges closer to Europe

March 5, 2010 by James Badcock Leave a Comment

Question: Which country applied for EU membership the same day as Turkey in 1987? Answer: Morocco. While full membership for the Maghrebi nation is viewed as impossible, the weekend of March 6-7 does signal a landmark on the long road toward a truly advanced status of integration into European structures and political realities onto which the Moroccan ruling elite is pinning so many of its hopes. The EU-Morocco summit, held within the architectural gem of Al Andalus, Granada’s Alhambra palace, is designed to celebrate the achievements of the past few years; Rabat has secured an advanced partnership status with the EU, unique in the Arab world, and agreed to an extensive trade deal – … [Read more...] about Morocco edges closer to Europe

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Aminatou Haidar, EU, EU-Morocco summit, european union, france, France Telecom, Granada, Mohammed VI, morocco, Renault, spain, western sahara

Sahara countdown

January 23, 2010 by James Badcock 1 Comment

Resistance is often the key to winning any conflict, and although the best part of two decades have passed without any significant military action in the war for Western Sahara, the pro-independence Polisario Front has always set great store by the power to resist of the Sahrawi refugees in the camps at Tindouf, Algeria. While Morocco, the occupying force in the territory that was known as Spanish Sahara until the European country withdrew in 1975, has kept up a whispering campaign about dwindling numbers in the desert camps – the Polisario’s constituency, although there is also an unknown number of supporters of independence inside the territory – officials of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic … [Read more...] about Sahara countdown

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: algeria, Aminatou Haidar, minurso, morocco, polisario, rabat, refugee, tindouf, unhcr, western sahara

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