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The Exhumation of Francisco Franco’s Remains

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September 26, 2019

What is the issue?

  • The Supreme Court of Spain recently ruled in favour of the government’s plan to exhume the remains of former dictator Francisco Franco.
  • After his death in 1975, Spain transitioned from the authoritarian structure to a constitutional monarchy.

What is the Spanish Civil War (1936-39)?

  • It is known as the ‘Guerra Civil’ in Spanish.
  • The conflict pitted Spain’s democratically elected Republican government against forces led by General Francisco Franco, who seized power in 1939 after three years of brutal warfare.
  • Supporters - Franco was supported by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, as well as by conservative elements within Spain.
  • The Republican government was helped by the Soviet Union and by volunteer forces from democratic countries in Europe and the US.
  • The major European democracies of the time, Britain and France, shied from helping Spain’s Republican government officially.
  • The Civil War is thus regarded by many as one of the key harbingers of World War II.

How was Franco’s rule (1939-1975)?

  • After becoming Spain’s ruler in 1939, Franco maintained the country’s neutrality in World War II but remained friendly with the Axis powers that had helped him come to power.
  • Franco’s initial years in office were especially repressive.
  • Thousands of political opponents were sent to prison by military tribunals, and executions by firing squads took place.
  • He prohibited the public use of regional languages such as Catalan and Basque.
  • Catholic Christianity was the declared state religion.
  • Trade unions were banned. Divorce and abortion were also forbidden.
  • Towards the end of his rule, Franco relaxed his grip on power, and his anti-communist stance brought him closer to the US and its allies during the Cold War.
  • The last two decades of his rule saw an overhaul of Spain’s economy.
  • In 1969, Franco declared the exiled royal Juan Carlos I as his official successor upon his death.
  • Juan Carlos I dismantled Spain’s authoritarian structure after taking over in 1975 and restored Spain to a constitutional monarchy.

Why the exhumation of Franco’s remains is to be done?

  • After his death in 1975, Franco was buried at the Valle de los Caídos, a state mausoleum.
  • It was built during his rule using forced labour and where 33,000 victims of the Spanish Civil War are buried.
  • In the years since, as democracy grew stronger in Spain, calls to relocate the dictator’s remains to a less honorific place arose.
  • 2018 - The Spanish parliament agreed to exhume Franco’s remains.
  • But the government’s plans were impeded by protests from the former dictator’s family as well as by church authorities.
  • 2019 - The Supreme Court’s decision has now cleared most obstacles in the government’s path, and the Catholic Church has agreed to abide by the ruling.

What does this move mean politically?

  • The Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), which is running Spain’s minority government, plans to relocate Franco’s remains to a less high profile location before the next general election in November 2019.
  • The move could improve the PSOE’s fortunes in the elections.
  • It could invigorate Spain’s far-right, for whom Franco’s mausoleum has become a rallying point.
  • In the last election in April 2019, the ultra-nationalist party obtained 10% of the popular vote, a first for the ultra-right since Franco’s death.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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