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Felipe González says that the agreement with Bildu on memory that affects the GAL of his Government does not "sound good"

SANTANDER, 5 Jul.

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Felipe González says that the agreement with Bildu on memory that affects the GAL of his Government does not "sound good"

SANTANDER, 5 Jul. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The former President of the Government Felipe González has transferred this Tuesday that the Government's pact with Bildu by which the new Memory Law will recognize the victims of human rights violations until 1983 does not "sound good".

This would include those who suffered torture or were the object of the so-called 'dirty war' against ETA during the five years after the approval of the Constitution and could affect the GAL in the first year of the Government of Felipe González, who arrived in October from 1982.

Asked about an assessment of this point of the new Democratic Memory law, the former leader has indicated that he has not seen the text: "When I see it I will tell them, but blow my nose, it does not sound good to me."

Speaking to the media from Santander, where he is taking part in a meeting at the Menéndez Pelayo International University (UIMP), he has also assessed the country's economic situation, but has ruled out speaking of a recession for the time being.

"The most serious problem that we have without a doubt is inflation, the one that already came from behind the exit of the covid and that was accelerated by Putin's war and the enormous degree of uncertainty that it is producing," he added. In this sense, the former president has emphasized that this is the greatest challenge that Spain has and that the rest "can be overcome more".

Regarding the increase in defense spending, González wanted to highlight a contradiction in relation to the differences with the coalition partners: "Those who defend that Europe must have strategic autonomy from the point of view of defense policy with respect to The United States, at the same time, defend that Europe does not spend on Defense".

“If someone makes me that rule of three, maybe I will begin to understand them, if not I will continue thinking that they are what they are,” the former president has settled.