Loita Armada Revolucionaria

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Loita Armada Revolucionaria (LAR)
Dates of operation 1978 - 1984
Motives The creation of a Socialist republic in Galicia. Galician independence.
Active region(s) Galicia
Ideology Marxism-leninism, Galician independentism.
Notable attacks Robberies and bombings.
Status Disarticulated

Loita Armada Revolucionaria (English: Revolutionary Armed Struggle) was an armed Galician nationalist and left-wing independentist organisation. Linked to the political party Galician Party of the Proletariat and the organization Galiza Ceibe-OLN, the group was formed in 1978 and carried out several attacks around Galicia, such as bank assaults and bombing campaigns.

History

LAR made its first action on 28 July 1978, with the burning of some trucks in Santiago de Compostela. Shortly after, the band tried to assault, unsuccessfully, a tinderbox in Noia. LAR also made another armed actions, the best known were the robbery of a subsidiary of the Caja de Ahorros de Ourense, attributed to Antom Árias Curto and the placement of explosives in the works of the Highway AP-9 (September 17, 1979).

In 1980, an important police raid led to the arrest of several members of the organization, including prominent activists and writers, among them writer and poet Xosé Luís Méndez Ferrín. The rest of the militants took refuge in Portugal. The detainees was applied antiterrorist law in force, remaining 10 days in solitary confinement, which reported being tortured.[1] After the arrest only two of the detained were released without charge. The rest of the detainees entered different prisons of Galiza, although later they would be subject of dispersion, applied by the Spanish legal system for the cases of terrorism, being relocated first in Madrid and then in Segovia. The organization in support of Galician prisoners, Xuntas Galegas pola Amnistía was formed as a result of the arrests. In 1981 the majority of the prisoners were released, although 5 of them remained in prison.[2] The trial took place in April 1982 in the Audiencia Nacional at Madrid, and resulted in the conviction of all the remaining prisoners.

The government of Felipe González declared an amnesty for all the LAR prisoners in 1983. After the release of most of its members, the group announced its dissolution in 1984.

Aftermath

Loita Armada Revolucionaria was the first armed organization fighting for the independence of Galicia. Later, Liga Armada Galega, Exército Guerrilheiro do Povo Galego Ceive and more recently Resistência Galega would follow the steps of LAR. The group had been linked with other independentist organizations active in Spain, such as ETA.

References

  1. Xosé Manuel del Caño (2005): Conversas con Méndez Ferrín. Historia, literatura, nación. Edicións Xerais, Vigo.
  2. Nieto Pereira, Xosé Cid Cabido, Antom Árias Curto, Edelmiro Domingues, Francisco Atanes and Arturo Estévez.
  • Various Authors. A Gran Historia de Galicia XVI: a Galicia autónoma (dende a Transición). Volume 1: A Transición en Galicia, Arrecife Edicións Galegas/La Voz de Galicia, 2007, A Coruña.
  • Justo Beramendi and Núñez Seixas, O Nacionalismo Galego, Edicións A Nosa Terra, Vigo, 1995. Page 280.
  • Rios Bergantinhos, Noa. A esquerda independentista galega (1977-1995). Abrente Editora, Santiago de Compostela, 2002.