MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
AP
Saturday, December 30, 2006
A car bomb exploded at Madrid's international airport injuring
four people on Saturday after an anonymous warning by telephone
and a second call claiming it was the work of Basque rebels ETA,
Spanish authorities said.
Passengers at the ultra-modern Terminal Four said the departure
hall filled with smoke after the explosion in a nearby parking
lot which could mark the end of a cease-fire declared by ETA in
March after four decades of armed struggle for Basque Country
independence.
The bomb exploded at about 9 a.m. (8:00 a.m. British Time), causing
minor injuries to four people including two police officers and
a taxi driver, emergency services said, and sending a huge pall
of smoke over the terminal at Barajas Airport.
While witnesses said they were evacuated after the explosion,
authorities received the first warning at about 8 a.m. (7:00 a.m.
British Time) after a man with a Basque accent called Basque traffic
authorities to warn them of a bomb in a purple Renault Traffic
van in a roofed parking area.
Shortly after, a separate caller to emergency services said the
bomb had been planted by ETA, a spokesman for the Basque regional
government said.
The government would not confirm ETA was responsible and a spokeswoman
said it would make a statement later on Saturday.
But an end to ETA's cease-fire would be a major blow to Socialist
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, who in June announced
the start of a peace process to end the Basque conflict.
Several Saturday newspapers, printed before the blast had front
page stories about Zapatero saying he was optimistic about the
talks, which have been criticised by the conservative opposition.
Stranded passengers were hurried out on to the airport runway,
together with their luggage.
An airport worker told radio that the explosion brought down
part of the parking lot roof.
"I was just getting my ticket when suddenly there was a
pretty big explosion and it filled the whole hall with smoke,
with a strong burning smell. Then the security people came, and
the Civil Guard, and told us we had to evacuate," one passenger
said.
Terminal Four suspended all flights after the attack, but other
terminals continued operating.
ETA has killed more than 800 people during its armed struggle.
The group said in November that it would break off contacts with
the authorities unless there was quick progress in separate talks
among political parties in the Basque Country over the region's
future.
But these talks have bogged down over issues including the continued
ban on ETA's political party ally Batasuna as well as vandalism
and low-level political violence by ETA supporters in the Basque
Country.
Spanish media reports said ETA had also demanded the government
move ETA prisoners closer to their homes and ease police pressure
on the ETA members still at liberty.