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Homeland Security

VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-320771 Aznar / Bombing Inquiry (L-O)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=11/29/04

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=AZNAR/BOMBING INQUIRY (L-ONLY)

NUMBER=2-320771

BYLINE=ROGER WILKISON

DATELINE=BRUSSELS

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

HEADLINE: Aznar Says He Told Truth About Madrid Bombings

INTRO: Former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar denies he blamed the Basque separatist group ETA for the March 11th train bombings in Madrid in an attempt to ensure his party's re-election three days later. VOA Europe correspondent Roger Wilkison reports from Brussels that Mr. Aznar appeared Monday before a Spanish parliamentary committee that is investigating the attacks.

TEXT: Mr. Aznar was combative as he refuted charges by left-wing lawmakers that he misled the Spanish people in the aftermath of the bombings by fingering ETA as the culprit, even after evidence emerged that Islamic extremists were responsible for the attacks.

The former Spanish leader told the parliamentary committee dominated by the Socialists who ousted his own Popular Party in elections three days after the bombings, that all the evidence at his disposal immediately after the attacks pointed to ETA.

Heard here through an interpreter, Mr. Aznar says the intelligence services of other countries also saw the Basque group as the prime suspect.

///AZNAR INTERPRETER ACT ONE///

"Government leaders whom I spoke with at the time of the attack told me that, based on the information that they received from their own intelligence, they concluded that ETA was responsible for the attack."

///END ACT///

Mr. Aznar also said that officials of the Socialist Party and the Basque regional government had immediately blamed ETA for the attack, which killed 191 people and injured more that 18 hundred.

Mr. Aznar's critics say he purposely continued to blame ETA because he feared that the disclosure of any Islamic link to the bombings would undermine his party's electoral chances. The bombers, in justifying their attacks, claimed they were seeking revenge for Mr. Aznar's support for the Iraq War, a policy that was overwhelmingly opposed by the Spanish public.

Mr. Aznar says he is convinced that the terrorists sought not only to kill as many people as possible but also to oust his government from power.

The Socialists resent any claim that their surprise electoral victory was due to the terrorist attack and accuse Mr. Aznar of trying to destabilize their government.

But the former prime minister says the Socialists and their allies continue trying to discredit his government by insisting that it had not told the truth about the bombings. (signed)

NEB/RW/RH/MEM



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