A Grand and Good "Inquisidor"

As expected, the Far Right in Spain is having a field day with Judge Garzón's suspension by the Judicial Branch of that country. Fortunately, countervailing forces have assembled to support him in his quest to bring the Franquistas to justice, amnesty law or no amnesty law. That 1977 law, as others of that sort, is nothing but a travesty of justice, by making impunity legal. There is a world of difference between an amnesty for, let's say, tax evasion and one for kidnapping, torture and murder on a grand scale.

The Judicial Branch in Spain ought to be ashamed of itself for resorting to technicalities to bring down Baltasar Garzón. Those who opposed him or, worse, supported his prosecution of Pinochet had to know that the day when he would turn his judicial eyes towards Franco's evil legacy was coming. It would've been the height of cynicism to go after Pinochet and not do anything against Franco's spiritual heirs.

He is paying the price for daring to open the Generalísimo's filthy tomb. Thousands of other tombs or common graves cry out to be opened.

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