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DyJ sends the judge of the Santa Pola case a report that highlights the "total control" of the ETA leadership over the attacks

They emphasize that the orders to "kill or stop killing" people could only come from the Executive Committee of the gang.

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DyJ sends the judge of the Santa Pola case a report that highlights the "total control" of the ETA leadership over the attacks

They emphasize that the orders to "kill or stop killing" people could only come from the Executive Committee of the gang

MADRID, 6 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The Dignity and Justice Association (DyJ) has sent a police report from 2014 to the judge of the National High Court investigating the attack perpetrated by ETA against the Santa Pola barracks in which the "total control" that the leadership of the organization terrorist had "even the last of the murderous pawns" in charge of committing the attacks.

It was last Saturday when the association sent the head of the Central Court of Instruction Number 6, Manuel García Castellón, an extensive report of more than 400 pages that was prepared by the National Police in December 2014 and that dealt "with the objectives pursued by the terrorist group since its constitution".

In that document, to which Europa Press has had access, the agents give details about various counter-orders issued by the ZUBA --the leadership of the gang-- and which, in DyJ's opinion, demonstrate "the tight control of ETA and where the authentic mastery of the act of killing or not killing human beings". "That it was not the man in front who pulled the trigger, but the man in the back who dominated who pulled the trigger," says the association.

It should be remembered that, in this case, the instructor focuses on the possible responsibility of the six former ETA chiefs who made up the gang's Executive Committee in the attack perpetrated on August 4, 2002, which ended life in Santa Pola of a 57-year-old man and a six-year-old girl, the daughter of a Meritorious agent.

It is, specifically, Juan Antonio Olarra Guridi, alias 'Juanvi'; Ainhoa ​​Mugica, alias 'Olga'; Felix Ignacio Esparza, alias 'Navarro'; Mikel Albisu, alias 'Mikel Antza'; Ramón Sagarzazu, alias 'Ramontxo', and María Soledad Iparraguirre, alias 'Anboto'. All of them were charged last July by the instructor, Manuel García Castellón, considering that they were at the top of the gang's ranks when the attack was committed.

Dignity and Justice now highlights a specific counter-order published by Zutabe -ETA's internal bulletin_ in 2005 and which would be related to the cessation of armed activities in Catalonia. In it, they point out, 'Mikel Antza' himself would have intervened "directly, presumably", "precisely in his capacity as leader of ETA and his political apparatus".

"It is always, time and time again, ETA's own ZUBA who, by her own hand, does not fail to offer us clear evidence of her total mastery of every last expendable pawn-assassin under her command. When ZUBA ordered to kill, they killed, when the ZUBA countermanded not to kill, they stopped killing. At the sole discretion of the ZUBA, at its sole whim, that of the ZUBA and that of no one else but the ZUBA," the association states.

In this context, DyJ highlights that 'Mikel Antza', contrary to the aforementioned counterorder -with which it was ordered to stop the attacks in Catalonia-, decided to "allegedly omit" one from 2002 in which it was called to "cease the attacks and murders against the Civil Guard".

"Which (given that great 'capacity' and 'efficiency' that ETA openly congratulated, and even in writing), would have been enough without any doubt to stop in its tracks the repeated sequence of attacks against the Civil Guard and never The attack of August 2002 in Santa Pola would not have taken place nor would its two mortal victims have lost their lives, who therefore, and barring other exceptional events in life at this time, would continue to live", laments the association.

Dignity and Justice has sent this report to the instructor coinciding with the one that the Civil Guard has sent to the magistrate himself. In it, of 312 pages, the Armed Institute assures that the leadership of ETA could have "avoided the outcome" by valuing the "position of command that they held within the terrorist organization and their broad capacity for action".

It was last March when the magistrate reopened the investigation into the attack on the Santa Pola barracks house and urged the Civil Guard and the National Police to send him all the data on the members of the ETA leadership in the moment of the events.

The Court agreed to open preliminary proceedings after the complaint filed, precisely, by the Dignity and Justice Association (DyJ) against the six heads of the terrorist group that allegedly made up the ZUBA at the time.