Euskadiko Sozialisten Batasuna Explained

Euskadiko Sozialisten Batasuna
Native Name:Basque Socialist Union
Colorcode:red
President:José Ramón Recalde
Ideology:Socialism
Antifascism
Basque nationalism
Antiimperialism
Workers' self-management
Position:Left
National:Linked to the Popular Liberation Front (FELIPE).
Country:Spain
State:Basque Country

The Euskadiko Sozialisten Batasuna (English: Basque Socialist Union, ESBA) was a clandestine political movement in the Southern Basque Country, Spain, formed in 1959, and active under Francoist Spain. It was the Basque sister organization of the Spanish Popular Liberation Front (FELIPE) and the Catalan Workers' Front of Catalonia (FOC).[1]

History

ESBA was founded in 1959, being heavily inspired by the Cuban revolution. In 1962 several militants of ESBA were arrested in Donostia, including their leader José Ramón Recalde. In 1965 Recalde was jailed again for refusing to pay a fine imposed for denouncing torture.

The group disappeared in 1969, due to police repression and to internal contradictions. Ex-ESBA members dispersed among many different organizations. Some former leaders of ESBA participated in the VI Assembly of ETA (1970), when most delegates approved an approach to revolutionary Marxism and the abandonment of the traditional nationalist thesis, splitting and creating the Liga Komunista Iraultzailea-ETA VI Assembly (LKI-ETA VI).

References

Notes and References

  1. http://www.euskomedia.org/aunamendi/43100 «EUSKADIKO SOZIALISTEN BATASUNA :: Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia :: Euskomedia». 23 May 2014.