your new go-to podcast to spice up your weekday mornings with relevant news and behind-the-scenes from Brussels and beyond From the economy to the climate and the EU's role in world affairs this talk show sheds light on European affairs and the issues that impact on our daily lives as Europeans Tune in to understand the ins and outs of European politics Dare to imagine the future with business and tech visionaries Deep dive conversations with business leaders Euronews Tech Talks goes beyond discussions to explore the impact of new technologies on our lives the podcast provides valuable insights into the intersection of technology and society Europe's water is under increasing pressure floods are taking their toll on our drinking water Join us on a journey around Europe to see why protecting ecosystems matters and to discover some of the best water solutions an animated explainer series and live debate - find out why Water Matters We give you the latest climate facts from the world’s leading source analyse the trends and explain how our planet is changing We meet the experts on the front line of climate change who explore new strategies to mitigate and adapt Spain has marked the 25th anniversary of the kidnapping and murder of Partido Popular local councillor Miguel Ángel Blanco Authorities and citizens gathered over the weekend to honour the former Basque official Blanco's abduction and murder shocked the whole country and marked a turning point in the fight against the armed separatist group The 29-year-old elected conservative councillor was kidnapped by ETA on 10 July 1997 as they called for Spain's government to transfer all ETA separatist prisoners to the northern Basque region within 48 hours After the government refused the "blackmail" order and despite nationwide protests calling for his release Blanco was fatally shot and his body was left in a wasteland area Three former ETA leaders were charged on Friday for their alleged role in the high-profile killing In 2018, the terrorist group formally dissolved after four decades of violence that resulted in more than 800 deaths Spain's King Felipe VI and Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez were joined by the Basque regional president Iñigo Urkullu at a ceremony over the weekend in Blanco's former town Felipe VI called for unity and the so-called "Spirit of Ermua" to remember "the value of peace Spain cannot allow there to be generations "who ignore what happened in those painful days [in 1997]," he added PM Sánchez also announced that Spanish students would also receive "direct testimony" from the victims of terrorism to help them understand historical events "Something changed us forever into a different country that would never again bow down to terrorism," he said IoT Digital Twin for public elevators in Ermua You’ve almost certainly experienced a broken elevator the immediate impacts on individuals are obvious: people kept from home late for work and unnecessarily expensive repairs we are developing a Digital Twin is of public elevators and deployment of systems small and large are critical contributors to success A wireless sensor inside elevator cabin tracks every movement of the elevator cabin Do you want to see the Digital Twin by yourself https://ermuaio.carrd.co/ Did you know that riding in an elevator used to be dangerous business invented a device that could prevent a passenger elevator from falling if its rope broke It debuted precisely 160 years ago at the E.V Haughwout and Company store in Manhattan on March 23 The wireless sensor inside the elevator cabin in charge of sensing is based on a STM32WB55CG which has 1 MByte of flash memory and 256 kBytes of SRAM; and the BMA400 low-power accel for wake-on-motion Height variation is tracked precisely on every wakeup interval The board sleeps at ~7 uA current and uses a few mA in "normal" operating mode the sensor node is intended to be placed inside the elevator cabin You can see below a 3D render of the PCB on it´s enclosure The enclosure is metallic gray and has rounded edges so that it mimics with metal surface in the elevator and does not draw much attention We 3D printed some units of the enclosure with PLA for prototyping You can see that the surfaces are not totally smooth due to the printing process but the overal end result is quite good The sensors are finally installed and fit quite nicely Would you like to see one of the real elevators where the development is running Finally, here is the Dashboard for Visual Analytics. You can have a closer look in this link: https://tabsoft.co/3m1Gyne The Eta group’s kidnap and murder of a young councillor in 1997 united a country in revulsion and the wounds are still open today The place where it happened is out past the hotel the pharmacy and the blocks of flats hung with washing and geraniums out where the small Basque town of Lasarte-Oria gives way to a narrow road fringed with trees and ferns Today, little carries on the humid coastal air save for birdsong, the barking of a distant dog and the growl of a cultivator. But, 25 years ago this week, two shots from a .22 calibre Beretta pistol rang out beneath the trees and echoed across the length and breadth of Spain At 4.40pm on 12 July 1997, Miguel Ángel Blanco, a 29-year-old councillor for the conservative People’s party (PP) in the Basque town of Ermua, was murdered on the outskirts of Lasarte-Oria. His killers were three members of Eta the terror group that waged a violent campaign over four decades for an independent Basque state Despite two bullets to the back of his head Blanco was still alive when he was found a few minutes after the shooting by a pair of locals Blanco had been kidnapped while on his way to work two days earlier chosen as the human bargaining chip in Eta’s latest public ultimatum: if the PP government of prime minister José María Aznar did not move all Eta prisoners to jails in the Basque country the young councillor would be dead within 48 hours By 1997, Spain was all too familiar with the lengths to which Eta would go in pursuit of its goals. In 1973, it had murdered prime minister Luis Carrero Blanco with a bomb so powerful his car was blown 20 metres into the air it bombed a Guardia Civil barracks in Zaragoza killing 11 people – including six children – and a supermarket in Barcelona Police search debris after the 1973 bombing that killed the Spanish prime minister Luis Carrero Blanco Photograph: Europa Press/AFP/Getty ImagesThe group also had a propensity for kidnapping A week-and-a-half before Blanco was snatched the prison officer José Antonio Ortega Lara was freed by police after being held captive by Eta for 532 days in a cramped While Spain had already suffered 30 years of personal and political terror there was something different about the cynical cruel and random murder of Blanco – evidenced by the watershed response it elicited Instead of being cowed into silence and fear millions of people across Spain took to the streets to say enough was enough One of those gathered outside Ermua town hall that weekend was a man in his early 20s called Juan Carlos Abascal He recalls how the crowd reacted to news of the murder “There was a look of absolute horror on people’s faces,” says Abascal a member of the Socialist Youth of the Basque country who would go on to become a leading MP for the Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) telling us that Miguel Ángel Blanco had been murdered,” says Madina “I was under the town hall balcony and I remember it just felt like it was raining razor blades.” Hooded ETA members hold a press conference in southern France after Luis Carrero Blanco’s death Photograph: AFP/Getty ImagesAware of how easily 48 hours’ worth of bottled-up fear and fury could explode Totorika decided to lead the crowd of thousands on a march to the nearby town of Eibar “That three-hour walk really helped people to calm down and come to terms with all the anger and hatred,” says Abascal “There was something constructive about it people began to lose their fear and there was a much more active mobilisation.” The massive protests that erupted elsewhere across Spain suggested Eta’s recently introduced strategy of inflicting the maximum possible pain across Basque society but this was a decisive moment when people said I think a lot of people had thought something like that could never happen to them They suddenly saw it could happen to any of us: to a councillor; to a lawyer; to a police officer This wasn’t just about killing a person – it was about telling an entire society to keep its mouth shut.” That moment – which Madina calls a “collective awakening” – occurred in a place that was a far cry from the Guggenheim-shiny tourist lure of today the Basque country “was like a mix of Belfast and Manchester: it was a time of pronounced post-industrial decline when you also had a terrorist organisation with an enormous capacity for killing – as many as 100 people a year in the 80s – and an enormous capacity for doing damage” During the so-called años de plomo (years of lead) the social and political atmosphere in the region was characterised by terrorist violence “and the cultural hegemony of the political movement that surrounded Eta’s terrorism meant that defending certain ideas was worth more than some human lives” That fanatical conviction was not destroyed despite the anger and revulsion that greeted Blanco’s murder – as Madina would discover five years later as he drove to work in his grey Seat Ibiza José Ignacio Zabala was one of the first victims of the GAL death squads Photograph: Courtesy of Pilar Zabala“What started as a normal Tuesday went on to become the worst day of my life,” he says of 19 February 2002 and the car exploded just as I was getting there It was very similar to Eta’s other car bombs but the difference was they didn’t manage to kill me – something went wrong.” Although the blast resulted in the amputation of his left leg above the knee and ended his volleyball career Madina refused to give in to hatred or bitterness “I’ve never been capable of hating; I’ve been more focused on justice and memory,” he says “I’ve made my peace with the past and my life is mine An hour’s drive from Lasarte-Oria is a building that seeks to enshrine the importance of justice and memory. The Memorial Centre for the Victims of Terrorism sits in the heart of the Basque capital of Vitoria-Gasteiz and opened last year as “a place for meeting Among its exhibits is the bomb jammer used by a Basque academic, a butane gas cylinder bomb, the tricornio hat of Antonio Jesús Trujillo Comino, one of two Guardia Civil officers murdered by Eta in July 1985 and a recreation of the tiny cell in which José Antonio Ortega Lara nearly lost his mind “It’s important for people to know about terrorism which has shaped the last 50 years of Spanish history,” says the centre’s director “The younger generation – people of 20 or 25 – don’t know what terrorism has meant in our history.” “We need to ensure that there isn’t a positive view of terrorism in people’s social values,” he says “It’s a preventive measure to make sure that future generations aren’t tempted to repeat all this.” The centre’s ample stock of warnings from the past is not confined to Eta or the Islamist terrorists who murdered 193 people in the Madrid train bombings of 2004 A photograph of a death-threat letter sent in 1985 shows that some in the state were quite prepared to use terror a cabal of Spanish officials and police officers formed paramilitary death squads know as the Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL) to take the fight to Eta – and to anyone it suspected of involvement with the group Pilar Zabala wants an independent investigation into killings by the Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL) death squads which operated between 1983 and 1987 during the Socialist administration of prime minister Felipe González Among their first victims were two young Basques accused of belonging to an Eta cell that tried to rob a bank in the Basque town of Tolosa in November 1981 They fled over the border to France but were kidnapped by Guardia Civil officers working for the GAL in October 1983 After being tortured and forced to dig their own graves While their bodies were discovered in Alicante province in 1985 “We spent 12 years looking for them tirelessly,” says Zabala’s sister Pilar and her family were condemned to years of agonising uncertainty a sadness so deep that felt like a part of your body had been amputated,” says Pilar “Our souls had been torn apart but we had to keep going and we had to keep working because we didn’t have much money had to go back to work a few days after my brother disappeared he told us how many nights he had spent crying as he drove because he felt so powerless and defenceless.” The identification of the remains brought a bittersweet closure and the family visited the place where the two men had been murdered and buried “This was where they’d made them dig their own graves and where they’d shot them dead,” says Pilar in that desert landscape that can only be reached on foot I thought about how they’d had to take their last steps to that place how they’d been forced to dig their own graves and about how they shot them and buried them under 50kg of quicklime It’s just unbearable to think that there are human beings who are capable of that level of atrocity Although those responsible for the murders were tried and jailed, Pilar and others are seeking a rigorous and independent investigation into the GAL’s atrocities and want the Spanish government to recognise “both its responsibility and the pain that was caused” “No one deserves to be murdered like that,” says Pilar But no democracy and no constitution allows or supports state terrorism.” But 11 years after Eta laid down its arms, and four years after disbanding and apologising for the suffering it caused It is frequently invoked by some on the Spanish right who accuse the Socialist-led minority government of being too dependent on Basque nationalist parties with links to the former political wing of Eta and of doing deals with “terrorists” particularly when it comes from those who did not live through the Basque country’s años de plomo “It makes me a bit sad; I think it devalues what the terrorism was and the struggle for freedom of so many people – some of whom gave their lives for it,” he says Domínguez believes a more public show of contrition from politicians with links to Eta is needed pointing out that the emotional pain of terrorism long outlives its material destruction “The personal damage lives on – as we’ve seen with the Spanish civil war,” he says “The war finished in 1939 but we’re still dealing with it and there are still issues to address, still lots of people who were shot and who are still lying in unmarked graves That the terrorism is far more recent makes it an ever greater one.” who is tired of being told to move on and to turn the page “You can’t turn the page on all this when that page still needs to be written,” she says it needs to be read and it needs to be come to terms with.” This is the archive of The Observer up until 21/04/2025 The Observer is now owned and operated by Tortoise Media Basque Country the four members of the extreme metal band Cerebral Effusion −Kosme drums− are getting ready for their upcoming US tour the first stop being to headline the Las Vegas Deathfest: “It’s going to be a very special concert for us,” said drummer Eihar Unamuno to EuskalKultura.com “It’s going to be a very special concert for us It is a honor to lead a festival like this in the US it’s something we would not even imagine a few years ago,” says Unamuno “It is undoubtedly the best reward we could’ve had for all these years of dedication and hard work We will have a very complete set list for that day because the relationship of the band with the US dates back to its beginnings: all the labels they have worked with are American “But it hasn’t been something premeditated,” explains the musician “The cradle of Brutal Death is in the US and I’d say that most labels are there although the Internet has globalized everything.” Thirteen concerts of Cerebral Effusion is a very physically demanding thing and if they are to be performed in thirteen days in a row doing something you enjoy is never a chore.” Also “we’re thrilled to tour with all these bands we will play with.” The band member believes there are “many good bands” in the Basque Country’s extreme metal scene he thinks “it’s not comparable to the American scene Unamuno would like to see as many Basque-Americans –fond of hardcore stuff− as possible in their concerts and encourages them to attend their shows