Forensic scientists have begun exhuming the corpses of 128 Spanish civil war victims from General Francisco Franco’s old mausoleum outside Madrid.
The exhumation is the first involving people whose bodies were moved from other parts of Spain after the 1936-1939 war and reburied without their families’ consent in a monument built by Franco in the Valley of Cuelgamuros, formerly known as the Valley of the Fallen.
As Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez seeks reelection, it is expected to make Franco’s four-decade tyranny, which still divides Spanish society, a matter of heated debate.
The remains of some 34,000 people, many of them civil war victims of Franco’s regime, are buried anonymously in the crypt of the basilica carved into a mountainside northwest of Madrid. Relatives have been fighting for years to give their loved ones a burial under their own names and near their families.
“Spanish democracy is finally providing answers for these victims,” government spokesperson Isabel Rodriguez said on state-owned TV station 24H.
Passing a law that makes it possible for relatives to identify victims who are buried in about 2,400 unmarked mass graves around Spain was one of the first policies implemented by Sanchez when he came to power in 2018.
The rival conservative People’s Party has opposed the so-called “Law on Democratic Memory” and vowed to repeal it if it wins power in the July 23 vote.
The process of identifying the remains could take weeks or months, meaning the results will probably be published after the election.
The remains of Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, founder of Spain’s fascist Falange movement that supported the Franco regime, were dug up and removed from the mausoleum in April.
That followed the exhumation of Franco’s body in 2019 as part of a plan to convert the complex, which includes a 150-metre-high cross and became a site of pilgrimage for his supporters, into a memorial to the 500,000 people killed during the civil war.
The Association for the Reparation of Historic Memory, an NGO representing victims of Franco, said on Twitter that while Franco’s family was able to carry out his coffin on their shoulders, the families of his victims had to find out through the media that their relatives were being exhumed.
Spain transitioned to democracy following Franco’s death in 1975.
Reuters