Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Where To Buy Everyday Minerals?
September 13, 1974.
Maria Angeles Martínez Rey Manuel Llanos Gancedo
Gerardo García Pérez Gómez Vaquero Francisco Antonio Lobo Aguado
Luis Martínez Martín Francisca Baeza Alarcón
Concepción Pérez Paino
Arco Tirado María Jesús Antonio Alonso
Palacín
María José Pérez Martínez Fernández Barral
Baldomero
Ayuso Félix Pinel
murdered by ETA in Madrid. Cafeteria
Roland E Street near the General Security Directorate.
"I left work that day and went home on the evening news when I was sitting and gave [...] the news." Mecachis "I said," to see if China has touched me. "Not I keep thinking about this when you knock on the door and presented the police at home. Burgos was the police who came to the village where we lived, and I say, "Francis King?" "Yes," I say. "Come with us to the station that has had an accident her daughter in Madrid." I said nothing more, nor in what state was or whether he had died or not. [...] Later
and through its partners could know how everything had happened. They went to eat at the cafeteria Rolando. They approached the counter and then I do not know the people who would, if it was to stop or not, shared the duties. While some went to the bar to order a meal or snack, my daughter was separated from the rest, I guess a few meters to take table. It was at that moment when the bomb exploded. [...] My daughter fell at once and nothing happened no friends, a few scratches and little else. [...]
Those Christmases were very sad, very sad. You'd see people happy, in the street, shopping, full of joy and you with your sadness and your grief. It was very sad for all the family. My youngest son, who was seven when his sister died, he seems less aware, but the other two daughters, who were sixteen and fourteen, they felt it a lot. M ª Angeles was his older sister and they were very attached to it. It took a lot to overcome. "
Maria Angeles
was a student and was in Madrid for tests of the only subject that was in September. The evidence collected here is only a fraction of that found in Forgotten , the book of Iñaki Arteta and Alfonso Biscuit. We can also hear and see Francisco with his wife in Testimonies of victims.
Antonio Llanos, brother of Manuel, a waiter in the cafe, is another victim who offers his testimony. From Forgotten, another excerpt:
"For my father and my mother was a tremendous disappointment. My mother, in particular, that was never the same again.
[...] in your head keeps hitting you in the same Question: Why was it? Why was it? If he did not get involved with anyone or commit any thing. Why did you remove it so?
[...] that's what happens when you kill someone. Kill to be killed, but others, who we want, we also kill a little. "
Manuel was 25.
Of the other victims know little. Gerardo Francisco and worked with Manuel in the cafeteria. Gerardo was a waiter and Francisco, aged 31, cook. Antonio, 55, railroad. Luis, 67, a commercial agent. Francisca, 45, teacher. "Concepcion, 62, administrative. Maria Jesus Antonio, newly married, had 26 and 30 years. Maria José and Baldomero, 21 and 24 were from Galicia and were passing in Madrid. Felix, police, was one of 80 wounded. He died two years later, on January 10, 1977, as a result of their injuries. ETA
never acknowledged the attack. ______
September 13, 1979
Carriego Modesto Pérez
killed by ETA in Barakaldo (Vizcaya), at the door of his house. Modesto
was director of an office of Banco Hispano Americano in Barakaldo. In January of that year, ETA members stormed the branch where she worked and was kidnapped for several hours. His son Rafael, also in Forgotten reads:
"... we never knew anyone who was arrested for the robbery and kidnapping. [...] Killing was very easy and everyday in this society gripped by fear and lack of sound moral standards. [ ...] On 13 September 1979, the day after her 47th birthday and months after kidnapping him, my father was killed by an ETA terrorist.
[...] We still live in that house, the home of the director of the Banco Hispano Americano, not ours, for a further year after the death of my father. My mother never told us that the bank send her away but what is certain is that the bank was not very sensitive with the procedure and suggested we someone else would take the place of my father and had to leave the floor. Also in that space of time ETA my mother sent him a letter telling him to leave in Barakaldo. So all our mother forced to take the decision to leave the house and leave town with her five children in tow. The family is very touched, of course. [...]
Briviesca Working where I met my wife and I married, the mayor and vice president of the Diputación de Burgos at the time I said, "Hey, why do not you come to council with me?" And I was the deputy mayor at City Hall from 91 to 95 years in which I presented to council and in Baracaldo and a number at General Meetings of Biscay for the PP. [...]
few days after deciding to kill Gregorio Ordonez. But there's no turning back for me. Órdago That is 100% personal tribute to my father. ".
______ September 13, 1980
José María Urquizu Goyogana
Killed by ETA in Durango (Vizcaya).
José María was a lieutenant colonel Army. belonged to the body of Pharmacy and was stationed in Burgos. Also ran in Durango, where he was, a pharmacy where he did clinical analysis. It was there that he was killed.
José María I was 55. He was married and father of five children.
One of them, Javier, is a member of COVITE. On January 19, 2006 in El Pais devoted an article to his parents, "Recordando a José María Urquizu Goyogana" . Begins and ends:
"have recently been completed 25 years since our father was murdered by cowardly miserable in the name of ETA. Entered the family's medicine with the pretext of testing a sample of blood. When our father bent over a microscope to do, was shot in the neck and the blood that flooded the pharmacy was his own. Our grandfather (his father), 90, was in the room next door. After that, did not live much longer. The murderers, accomplished his mission (with the forced complicity, of course, a few cookies no less cowardly and miserable that they) fled. His crime remains unpunished to date. [...]
our mother's heart beat for four years after the death of our father, but was an extension, in fact, the bullet that killed my father also started the same day kill our mother. Today, 25 years later, we are proud of them, from their example, and try to remain faithful to the ethical and human values \u200b\u200binstilled in us "
______
A hug to all families.
And thanks to Frank King and his wife, Antonio Llanos, Rafael and Javier Urquizu Carriego to allow something closer to the experience.
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