Encyclopedia > Aftermath of the 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks
March 12: An estimated 1.5 million people filled Barcelona's Passeig de Gràcia The 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks were followed by an intensive criminal investigation, leading to the arrest of several people, and massive street demonstrations in numerous Spanish cities. Three days after the attacks, the presiding Spanish government was defeated in the Spanish general election. Download high resolution version (500x667, 86 KB)I took this picture on March 12th at 20. ...
Download high resolution version (500x667, 86 KB)I took this picture on March 12th at 20. ...
The 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks (also known as 11/3, 3/11, M-11 and 11-M) were a series of coordinated terrorist bombings against the commuter train system of Madrid, Spain on the morning of 11 March 2004, which killed 191 people and wounded more than 1,800. ...
Map of Spains electoral circumscriptions, and the parties leading in each circumscription in the election for the Congress of Deputies Legislative elections were held in Spain on March 14, 2004. ...
Investigation Following the attacks, initial suspicions focused on the Basque armed separatist group Euskadi Ta Askatasuna ("Basque Fatherland and Liberty") or ETA, although suggestions that the Islamist organisation al-Qaida was responsible were also immediately advanced. This article is about the Basque people. ...
ETA logo Euskadi Ta Askatasuna, or ETA (IPA: [ˈɛːta]), is an armed Basque terrorist organisation that seeks to create an independent socialist state for the Basque people, separate from Spain and France, the states that currently control the Basque country. ...
Islamism is a political ideology derived from the conservative religious views of Muslim fundamentalism. ...
Al-Qaeda (Arabic: القاعدة, the foundation or the base) is the name given to a worldwide network of militant Islamist organizations under the leadership of Osama bin Laden. ...
These suggestions were strengthened when a van was found parked outside the rail station at Alcalá de Henares, containing audio tapes of verses of the Qur'an, as well as clothes, cell phones and copper detonators. Furthermore, forensic analysis of an undetonated bomb found in a backpack outside El Pozo indicated that neither the explosives nor the detonators used in the attacks were of the type normally used by ETA. The detonators were made of copper, while ETA uses aluminium detonators. Also, the explosive used, Goma-2 made in Spain by Explosivos Río Tinto, was unlike the foreign-made Titadine brand explosive used by ETA. The design of the bomb, in which a cell phone was used as a timer or remote control device, also did not conform to customary ETA design. Alcalá de Henares is a Spanish city. ...
The Quran (Arabic: al-qurÄn; its literal meaning is the recitation and is often called Al QurÄn Al KarÄ«m: The Noble Quran or The Glorious QurÄn, also transliterated as Quran, Koran, and less commonly Alcoran) is the holy book of Islam. ...
Goma-2 Eco is a type of high explosive manufactured for industrial use (chiefly mining) by Unión Española de Explosivos S.A. It is a gelatinous, nitroglycerin-based explosive widely used within Spain and exported abroad. ...
The importance of these findings was that this was the only complete bomb recovered by the investigation. The detonators were of the same type found in the van outside the station at Alcalá de Henares. The cell phones were modified with two holes drilled near the power uptake. Similarly altered phones had been found on a previous occasion during a police investigation of al-Qaida activity. According to police sources, the attacks were carried out by a group of six Moroccans, and it is suspected that one of the bombers died in the blasts, although analysis of the autopsies of the victims had earlier suggested an absence of suicide bombers among the dead. On March 30, interior minister Angel Acebes said that the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group was the "investigators' priority," although he insisted that other terrorist organisations had not been ruled out. March 30 is the 89th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (90th in Leap years). ...
The Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (Groupe Islamique Combattant Marocain, or GICM) is an extremist Islamic fundamentalist group operating in North Africa and suspected of having links with al-Qaida. ...
Letter The London-based Arabic newspaper al-Quds al-Arabi reported receiving an e-mail communication on 11 March, from someone claiming to be from al-Qaida and claiming responsibility for the attacks. The letter was signed by the "Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades". The newspaper had previously received letters from the same group claiming responsibility, on behalf of al-Qaida, for the bombing of two synagogues in Turkey on November 15, 2003 and the United Nations headquarters in Baghdad on August 19, 2003. The Clock Tower of the Palace of Westminster which contains Big Ben Tower Bridge at night A red double-decker bus crosses Piccadilly Circus. ...
Arabic (العربية) is a Semitic language, closely related to Hebrew and Aramaic. ...
11 March is the 70th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (71st in Leap year). ...
Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades is a group which claims to be associated with the Islamic fundamentalist organisation Egypt who was a member of Ayman al-Zawahiris al-Jihad al-Islami (Islamic Jihad). ...
A synagogue (from Greek ÏÏ
ναγÏγη, transliterated sunagoge, place of assembly literally meeting, assembly) is a Jewish house of prayer and study. ...
November 15 is the 319th day of the year (320th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 46 days remaining. ...
2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The United Nations, or UN, is an international organization established in 1945 and now made up of 191 states. ...
A street map of Baghdad Average temperature (red) and precipitations (blue) in Baghdad Baghdad (Arabic: ) is the capital of Iraq and the Baghdad Province. ...
August 19 is the 231st day of the year (232nd in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The letter referred to the bombings as "settling old accounts with Spain the crusader", possibly a reference to the Christian reconquista of Spain that ended in 1492 and the subsequent expulsion of Muslims from the country. Osama bin Laden has also previously used the term to refer to the United States and the United Kingdom, drawing a parallel between the UK/US presence in the Middle East and the medieval Crusades. (President Bush once called the war on terror a "crusade", but did not use the term again, due to its sensitivity among Muslims.) Christianity is the worlds largest religion. ...
For other uses, see Reconquista (Disambiguation). ...
Events January 2 - Boabdil, the last Moorish King of Granada, surrenders his city to the army of Ferdinand and Isabella after a lengthy siege. ...
Osama bin Laden UsÄmah bin Muhammad bin `Awad bin LÄdin (born July 30 or March 10, 1957) (Arabic: ), commonly known as Osama bin Laden (Arabic: ), is the figurehead of al-Qaeda, an Islamist movement that has been involved in attacks against civilians and military targets around the world. ...
A map showing countries commonly considered to be part of the Middle East The Middle East is a region comprising the lands around the southern and eastern parts of the Mediterranean Sea, a territory that extends from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. ...
This article is about historical Crusades . ...
George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is a politician and the current (43rd) president of the United States. ...
The letter also referred to Spain's alliance with the United States in "its war against Islam", and warned that a major attack against the US was "90 percent ready". The message declared that "soon the Death Smoke Squad will reach you and you will see your people dead in the thousands" and advised Muslims around the world "not to come near civilian or military institutions of the USA". The letter also stated that "the death squad has penetrated the heart of one of the pillars of the crusader alliance, Spain, and dealt a painful blow," and asks "Aznar, where is America, who will protect you from us? Great Britain, Japan, Italy and the others? When we attacked the Italian troops at Nasiriya and sent you and the American agents an ultimatum to withdraw from the anti-Islam alliance, you did not get the message. Now we make it clear and we hope this time you'll get it. ... We the Brigades of Abu Hafs al-Masri feel no sorrow for so-called civilians. If it is OK for you to kill our children, women, elderly and young in Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine and Kashmir, why should we not kill yours?" Nāşirīyah (also transliterated as Nassiriya or Nasiriya; in Arabic ناصرية, al-Nasiriyah or an-Nasiriyah) is a city in Iraq. ...
However, the veracity of these claims has been questioned. The Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades have a history of making false claims of responsibility, notably claiming that they had caused the 2003 North America blackout when it was in fact the result of a cascading failure in the electricity distribution network. A massive power outage produced a blackout in parts of the northeastern United States and eastern Canada on August 14, 2003. ...
Videotape According to Spanish Interior Minister Ángel Acebes, a Madrid television station Telemadrid received a phone call on 13 March from a man speaking in Arabic with a Moroccan accent announcing that a videotape claiming responsibility for the attacks could be found in a wastebasket near a Madrid mosque. On the tape, a man speaking Arabic with a Moroccan accent and wearing Arabic dress claimed the group was responsible for the bombings. March 13 is the 72nd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (73rd in leap years). ...
Arabic (العربية) is a Semitic language, closely related to Hebrew and Aramaic. ...
The videotaped message, in translation, went as follows: - We declare our responsibility for what happened in Madrid exactly two and a half years after the attacks on New York and Washington. It is a response to your collaboration with the criminals Bush and his allies. This is a response to the crimes that you have caused in the world, and specifically in Iraq and Afghanistan, and there will be more, if God wills it. You love life and we love death, which gives an example of what the Prophet Muhammad said. If you don't stop your injustices, more and more blood will flow and these attacks will seem very small compared to what can occur in what you call terrorism. This is a statement by the military spokesman for al-Qaida in Europe, Abu Dujan al-Afghani.
Interior Ministry officials said it was unclear whether that the concluding claim meant the man was Abu Dujan al-Afghani himself or that he was speaking in his name. Acebes said the name was not known to intelligence agencies, and that they were checking the tape's authenticity. On Monday, 15 March the tape was confirmed to be authentic. Abu Dujan al-Afghani is the purported military spokesman for Al-Qaida in Europe. ...
Arrests In the afternoon of 13 March 2004, seven suspects were arrested around Madrid in connection with the sale and falsification of a cellphone and pre-paid card found inside the unexploded backpack found at El Pozo station. Three of them were described as Moroccan citizens, two as Indian citizens, and two as Spaniards of Indian origin. The two Spaniards were picked up for questioning and were not formally arrested, but remained in custody the next day and were released two days later. The three Moroccans were identified as Jamal Zougam, 30; Mohamed Bekkali, 31, a mechanic; and Mohamed Chaoui, 34, a worker; all three from northern Morocco. The two Indians were identified as Vinay Kohly and Suresh Kumar. Three of the suspects had previous police or judicial records and one was under investigation for suspected participation in murder. One suspect may have also had connections with Moroccan extremist groups. It was apparently alleged that the arrested men provided logistical support to the actual perpetrators of the attacks. March 13 is the 72nd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (73rd in leap years). ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Zougam, the main suspect, had already been under surveillance since May of 2003, when suicide bombings in Casablanca against Jewish and Spanish targets killed 33 people and 12 bombers. The Casablanca bombings were blamed on Salafia Jihadia, a secretive, ultra-radical offshoot of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group, which is suspected of having links to al-Qaida. For the 1942 film, see Casablanca (movie). ...
The word Jew (Hebrew: ×××××) is used in a wide number of ways, but generally refers to a follower of the Jewish faith, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity and often a combination of these attributes. ...
The Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (Groupe Islamique Combattant Marocain, or GICM) is an extremist Islamic fundamentalist group operating in North Africa and suspected of having links with al-Qaida. ...
Zougam is mentioned in the investigation of the al-Qaida cell allegedly involved in the September 11 attacks, and in a separate investigation into Afghan recruitment rings. Zougam faces no formal charges in Morocco, but is suspected of having ties to the radical Islamic movement. The other two Moroccan suspects had no police record at home. One of the arrested suspects was recognized by two survivors of the blast who said they saw him before the explosions took place. On 13 March San Sebastián police detained an Algerian named Ali Amrous who allegedly talked about a terrorist attack in Madrid two months before it occurred. Amrous, an apparent indigent, was first arrested in January 2004 after a neighborhood disturbance and made the threatening comments while being questioned by police, saying that "we will fill Madrid with the dead." Authorities doubted he was connected at a high level with any terrorist group but may have known about the attacks in advance. Amrous was questioned and then released on 19 March. March 13 is the 72nd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (73rd in leap years). ...
Geography > Europe > Spain > Basque Country > Guipúzcoa San Sebastián with sailboats Statue of Jesus on Urgull Mountain San Sebastián (Donostia in Basque) is the capital city of the province of Guipúzcoa, in the Spanish autonomous community of Basque Country. ...
Five additional suspects were arrested on 18 March around Alcalá de Henares. Three of the suspects were identified as Moroccans Farid Oulad Ali, a construction worker, Abderrahim Zbakh and Saad Houssaini; one as a Spanish citizen, arrested in Asturias region in northern Spain, for investigation of robbery of explosives; and a fifth as Mohamed El Hadi Chedadi, the brother of Said Chedadi, an alleged al-Qaida operative arrested in 2001. One of those arrested was suspected of a major role in the attack and was also wanted over the Casablanca bombings. March 18 is the 77th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (78th in leap years). ...
Four suspects were arrested on 22 March. These included three picked up in Madrid's Lavapies district, a multiethnic neighborhood where chief suspect Jamal Zougam ran a cell phone shop. The fourth was arrested in Getafe, a suburb of Spain's capital. March 22 is the 81st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (82nd in Leap years). ...
On 31 March news agencies reported that international arrest warrants for five suspects were to be issued by the Spanish judge investigating the attacks. A Moroccan national, Abdelkrim Mejjati, was named as the alleged mastermind of the Madrid and Casablanca attacks with the remainder believed to either have been among the perpetrators or to have played a supporting role. (BBC) March 31 is the 90th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (91st in Leap years), with 275 days remaining, as the final day of March. ...
On 3 April 2004, as police moved in to arrest some suspects in an apartment building in Leganés, the suspects blew themselves up, killing a special forces agent and wounding 11 other police officers, according to a report from CBC News. No bystanders were reported injured, as the area around the apartments had previously been evacuated. Among the dead suspects were the Moroccans Jamal Ahmidan, Asri Rifat Anouar and Abdennabi Kounjaa, and the Tunisian Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet. Fakhet was described as the ringleader of the Madrid bombing. One dead suspect was not yet identified by April 5. April 3 is the 93rd day of the year (94th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar, with 272 days remaining. ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Leganés is a town in central Spain. ...
April 5 is the 95th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (96th in leap years). ...
On 6 May, Brandon Mayfield was arrested at his office in West Slope, Oregon on the basis that a fingerprint found on a bag containing detonating devices was identified as his by the FBI. Although his lawyer and family protested that Mayfield had not been to Spain for at least ten years, and had no other ties to the attacks, he remained in jail and incommunicado for two weeks as a material witness. Spanish authorities, who had been doubtful of the identification, finally announced on 21 May that their initial identification was incorrect, and Mayfield was at last released by the US government. May 6 is the 126th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (127th in leap years). ...
Brandon Mayfield (born 1966) is an attorney at law with a practice in Washington County, Oregon and is best known for being erroneously linked to the 11 March, 2004 Madrid attacks. ...
West Slope is an unincorporated suburb of Portland, Oregon and a census-designated place. ...
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is a Federal police force which is the principal investigative arm of the United States Department of Justice (DOJ). ...
A material witness is a witness who possesses relevant and important information in a criminal investigation or trial. ...
May 21 is the 141st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (142nd in leap years). ...
On 8 June, police in Milan arrested Rabei Osman el Sayed Ahmed for belonging to an international terrorist organization. Spain announced that he was a "mastermind" of the Madrid attacks with links to Fakhet and Amer El Azizi, a Morrocan, one of 10 suspects still at large. June 8 is the 159th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (160th in leap years), with 206 days remaining. ...
Location within Italy Piazza della Scala Milan (Italian: Milano; Milanese dialect: Milán) is the main city in northern Italy, and is located in the plains of Lombardy, the most populated and developed of Italian regions. ...
Charges On 19 March 2004, Spanish authorities publicly accused, for the first time, three Moroccans of direct involvement in the attacks. Spanish judge Juan del Olmo charged Jamal Zougam, Mohamed Bekkali and Mohamed Chaoui with 190 murders (those of bodies identified at the time), 1,400 attempted murders, and membership of a terrorist group. The three Moroccans claimed in court that they were at home in bed when the bombs went off and denied having anything to do with the attacks. Two Indian men, Vinay Kohly and Suresh Kumar, were charged with collaborating with a terrorist group and falsifying a sales document. March 19 is the 78th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (79th in leap years). ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The five suspects, who had been kept in a holding cell in a police station, were sent to Soto del Real jail on Madrid's northern outskirts early on 19 March, 2004 and ordered by del Olmo to be held incommunicado, barring contact with lawyers and family members. The charges mean they can be jailed for up to two years while investigators gather evidence to try to bring them to trial. After that, they can be held for an additional two years, be indicted and put on trial, or be released if there is insufficient evidence to try them. Four more suspects were charged on 23 March 2004. Spaniard José Emilio Suárez, was accused of providing explosives for the attacks, with 190 counts of murder, 1,430 counts of attempted murder, robbery and collaborating or belonging to a terrorist organization. Moroccan Abderrahim Zbakh was charged with all those same offenses except robbery. Mohamed El Hadi Chedadi and Abdelouahid Berrak, also Moroccans, were charged with collaborating with or belonging to a terrorist organization. March 23 is the 82nd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (83rd in Leap years). ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Political response Spanish leaders across the political spectrum responded to the attacks by reaffirming democratic values. They also asserted that terrorists must not be allowed to achieve policy change through killings; a stance that is reiterated after every violent ETA action in Spain. In a press conference on 12 March, Prime Minister Aznar, while not discarding any line of investigation regarding the perpetrators, said that "this is not the time" to discuss past foreign policy decisions. He also announced 140 million euros in aid to victims, granted Spanish nationality to affected foreigners, and promised legal residency to illegal immigrants affected by the attacks. He also said he did not give the benefit of the doubt to the mouthpieces of illegal organizations – a reference to the comments of Arnaldo Otegi of Batasuna shortly after the attacks took place. March 12 is the 71st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (72nd in Leap years). ...
Since the attacks occurred three days before a general election, they soon became the subject of political controversy. Opposition politicians and commentators urged the government to be clearer and more forthcoming about the information they had on the perpetrators. Socialist party leader José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said that "the political response must be different, according to whether it was an al-Qaida or ETA attack." Later in the day, he limited his comments to demanding "the utmost diligence" in publicizing information regarding the attacks and encouraged people to attend the demonstrations scheduled for the evening. He also called for a meeting of all major political parties on Monday to "stand up to the murderers" together. The Spanish Socialist Workers Party (Partido Socialista Obrero Español or PSOE) is one of the main parties of Spain. ...
Term of office: April 17, 2004 â present Preceded by: José MarÃa Aznar Succeeded by: incumbent Date of birth: August 4, 1960 Place of birth: Valladolid First Lady: Sonsoles Espinosa Political party: PSOE José Luis RodrÃguez Zapatero (born August 4, 1960) is the Prime Minister of Spain. ...
Juan José Ibarretxe Markuartu, head of government in the Basque Country, said that "we have a right to know the truth and, above all, it is something that is owed to the victims and their families." He stressed that, while not changing the human tragedy, the political interpretation of the bombings depended on who has carried them out. Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira of the Catalan nationalist party, the Republican Left of Catalonia, who had recently come under fire for secretly meeting with ETA and advocated dialog, said that he was convinced that "the government delays and hides information" and demanded that the government clarify before the election whether al-Qaida was to blame. Juan José Ibarretxe Juan José Ibarretxe Markuartu (born May 15, 1957) is a Basque politician. ...
Capital Vitoria-Gasteiz Official languages Basque and Spanish Area – Total – % of Spain Ranked 14th 7 234 km² 1,4% Population – Total (2003) – % of Spain – Density Ranked 7th 2 108 281 5,0% 291,44/km² Demonym – English – Basque – Spanish Basque euskal herritar, euskaldun vasco/a, vascongado/a Statute of Autonomy...
Order: 2nd First Minister of the Generalitat de Catalunya Term of office: December 16, 2003 â January 27, 2004 Preceded by: Artur Mas i Gavarró Succeeded by: Josep Bargalló i Valls Date of birth: Saturday, May 17, 1952 Place of birth: Cambrils de Mar (Baix Camp) Political party: ERC Josep-Llu...
ERC may mean: in telephony, an easily-recognizable code in the NANP area codes European Rugby Cup, the organisation that runs the Heineken Cup a political party in Catalonia, the Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya Emacs Relay Chat, a module written in Emacs Lisp that provides IRC functionality This is a...
Claiming that the government held the information about the van found outside the Alcalá station, José Blanco of the PSOE said he believed the government would withhold information until after the 14 March elections. Similar statements were made by members of the Basque regional government. Gaspar Llamazares of the United Left (the electoral front of the Communist Party of Spain), asked the government to provide "the truth, all the truth and nothing but the truth", which is the phrase used for witnesses' oaths at a trial in Spain. The Spanish Socialist Workers Party (Partido Socialista Obrero Español or PSOE) is one of the main parties of Spain. ...
March 14 is the 73rd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (74th in Leap years) with 292 days remaining in the year. ...
Gaspar Llamazares Trigo (born November 28, 1957 in Logroño, La Rioja, Spain) is a Spanish politician. ...
United Left is the name of a political party in various countries Argentina - United Left Austria - United Left (defunct) Peru - United Left Spain - United Left See also: List of political parties. ...
Categories: Communist parties | Spanish political parties ...
Mariano Rajoy, the ruling People's Party's candidate for prime minister and a member of Aznar's cabinet, stressed that he was more interested than anyone in knowing who was responsible, and he further noted that he lent no credibility to the claims of responsibility by an al-Qaida group. He also said that "no distinctions can be made between terrorists". Deputy Prime Minister Javier Arenas defended the idea that ETA was responsible, recalling that "they have attempted it on four occasions". Aznar responded to criticism by promising that "we will tell the Spanish people everything we know". Mariano Rajoy Brey Mariano Rajoy Brey (born March 27, 1955), Spanish politician, is the leader of the opposition and of the conservative Peoples Party, (PP). ...
From the left: Mariano Rajoy, Josep Piqué and José María Aznar during the proclamation act of Josep Piqué in September 2003 The Peoples Party ( Spanish: Partido Popular) is a large liberal- conservative political party in Spain. ...
Interior Minister Acebes insisted that ETA was the most likely culprit, drawing parallels with attempted train massacres at Chamartín and Vall d'Aran rail stations during the Christmas seasons of 2002 and 2003, respectively. He reported the finding of another unexploded bomb in a duffel bag loaded with explosives and shrapnel, with a detonator of the same type as was found in the van on 11 March. He also indicated that the Spanish government doubts, based on intelligence, that the claim of responsibility submitted to a London newspaper is authentic. Val dAran, a small valley (620. ...
2002 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
11 March is the 70th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (71st in Leap year). ...
The Association of Arabic Entrepreneurs in Spain condemned the attacks and said that the Arabic community feared for their personal security should a connection to al-Qaida be confirmed. In Pamplona, an off-duty National Police agent shot dead his neighbour baker associated with an association of relatives of ETA prisoners. The police officer immediately gave himself up for arrest. Apparently, the baker was involved in an argument with the wife and son of the police officer, who demanded that the baker display a flag with a black ribbon and a banner against ETA. Supporters of ETA prisoners protested demonstrating and rioting on the streets. ...
On the evening of 13 March, thousands of demonstrators, demanding to know who was behind the attacks before the general election the following day, gathered in front of Popular Party offices or government delegations in several major cities. Police monitored these spontaneous demonstrations and in some cases asked demonstrators to produce identification. The Madrid demonstration was cordoned off and riot police were called to stand by. Such spontaneous demonstrations are illegal under Spanish law. March 13 is the 72nd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (73rd in leap years). ...
Mariano Rajoy called the demonstrations "undemocratic pressure on tomorrow's elections", and the Popular Party filed a complaint with the Central Electoral Board, as the day before an election is intended to be a "day of reflection" and no political campaigning is allowed. The Central Electoral Board later certified the illegality of the demonstrations. Earlier in the day, the United Left had filed a separate claim against the publication in the newspaper El Mundo of an interview with Rajoy in which he asked voters for "an absolute majority" in Sunday's elections. The demonstrations against the People's Party were apparently organized over instant messaging using cell phones. In particular, the demonstration in Barcelona seems to have followed smart mob tactics, moving quickly from one location to another by breaking up into smaller groups. Slogans included "We want the truth before voting," "Liars, liars, who did it?", "Aznar, we all pay for you", or "who got us into this?", "this happens to us for having a fascist government", "against partisan use of data", "this is the price of oil", and "your war, our dead". An instant messenger is a computer application which allows instant text communication between two or more people through a network such as the Internet. ...
Smart mob is a concept introduced by Howard Rheingold in his book Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution. ...
According to this story, one man, who claimed to have no connection to political parties but was angered by national TV station coverage of the investigation, sent a message to ten friends asking them to "pass it on", and did not expect thousands of people to join the demonstration.
Observances following the attacks Source: El Mundo | Protest turnout 11,400,000 (out of 40,000,000)
 Flag of Spain with the black ribbon of national grief Flag of Spain (Black Ribbon) File links The following pages link to this file: User:Montrealais User:Pollinator Aftermath of the 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks Black ribbon Categories: Images with unknown source ...
Flag ratio: 2:3 The flag of Spain in its current form was adopted on December 19, 1981. ...
Ribbon of Spanish grief. ...
 11 March/Madrid: We do not forget you. Madrid March 11 logo for demonstrations against the attacks No os olvidamos roughly translates to We do not forget This is a copyrighted and/or trademarked logo. ...
| | Madrid | 2,000,000 | | Barcelona | 1,500,000 | | Bilbao (pop. 350,000) | 300,000 | | Valencia (pop. 800,000) | 400,000 | | Seville (pop. 700,000) | 700,000 | | Zaragoza | 400,000 | | Vigo (pop. 300,000) | 400,000 | | Oviedo (pop. 203,000) | 350,000 | | Cádiz (pop. 160,000) | 350,000 | | Murcia | 300,000 | | Logroño | 100,000 | | Jaén | 120,000 | | Pamplona (pop. 171,000) | 85,000 | | Santander | 85,000 | | Valladolid (pop. 390,000) | 250,000 | | Ourense (pop. 109,000) | 65,000 | | Las Palmas (pop. 365,000) | 40,000 | | Lugo | 40,000 | In the wake of the attacks, Prime Minister Aznar declared three days of national mourning. Flags were lowered to half-mast and all television stations displayed a logo of a black ribbon. The European Parliament declared 11 March a memorial day to commemorate the victims of terrorism. The European Parliament presidency under Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern called for an EU-wide three minutes' silence at noon Spanish time (11:00 UTC) on Monday 15 March. Coat of arms Plaza de España (Spain square) Madrid, the capital of Spain, is located in the center of the country at 40°25′ N 3°45′ W. Population of the city of Madrid proper was 3,093,000 (Madrilenes, madrileños) as of 2003 estimates. ...
Barcelona within Barcelonès Population (2003) 1,582,738 Area 1004 Km2 Population density (2001) 15,764/Km2 Barcelona is the capital of Catalonia, Spain, a region in northeastern Spain (41°23′ N 2°11′ E). ...
Geography > Europe > Spain > Basque Country > Biscay Cityscape of Bilbao, with the Guggenheim Museum on the bottom right Bilbao from satellite (NASA World Wind Landsat) Bilbao (Basque: Bilbo) is a city in northern Spain, the largest city in the Pais Vasco and the capital of the province of Vizcaya (Basque: Bizkaia). ...
Pavement of a Valencia street, with arbour. ...
The Giralda Tower Seville (Spanish: Sevilla) is the artistic, cultural, and financial capital of southern Spain, crossed by the river Guadalquivir (37° 22Ⲡ38ⳠN 5° 59Ⲡ13ⳠW). ...
Zaragozas location in Spain Zaragoza (frequently Saragossa in English; Latin Caesaraugusta) is the capital city of the autonomous region and former kingdom of Aragón in Spain, and is located on the river Ebro, and its tributaries the Huerva and Gállego, near the centre of the region, in...
Situation of Vigo within Galicia Vigo is the largest city of the Galicia region and Pontevedra province in northwestern Spain. ...
Capital Oviedo Area - total - % of Asturias Ranked 21st 184. ...
City nickname: none Location within the province of Cadiz Province Cadiz Mayor Teofila MartÃnez SaÃz Area âLand âWater 592 km² 592 km² 0. ...
Murcia is a city in southeastern Spain, and is the capital of the Autonomous Community of Murcia, on the Segura river. ...
Logroño (2004 pop. ...
Jaén may refer to: Jaén, Spain Jaén Province, Spain Jaén, Peru Jaén Province, Peru This is a disambiguation page â a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Pamplona (Basque: Irunea / Iruñea) is the capital city of Navarre, Spain. ...
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Valladolid is an industrial city in central Spain, upon the Rio Pisuerga. ...
Ourense (Galician official name Ourense; Spanish traditional name Orense) is a town in northwestern Spain, the capital of the province of Ourense in Galicia. ...
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is a Spanish city, the capital city of Gran Canaria one of the Canary Islands, in the Atlantic Ocean, 210 kilometers located off the northwestern coast of Africa. ...
Lugo is a city in northwestern Spain, the capital of the province of Lugo in the autonomous community of Galicia in Spain. ...
Ribbon of Spanish grief. ...
The European Parliament is the parliamentary body of the European Union (EU), directly elected by EU citizens once every five years. ...
11 March is the 70th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (71st in Leap year). ...
The Taoiseach (plural: Taoisigh) or, more formally, An Taoiseach, is the head of government of the Republic of Ireland and the leader of the Irish cabinet1. ...
Patrick Bartholemew Ahern (Irish name: Pádraig Parthalán à hEachthairn) (born September 12, 1951), commonly called Bertie Ahern, is an Irish politician. ...
March 15 is the 74th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (75th in Leap years). ...
King Juan Carlos addressed the nation directly for the first time (apart from his annual Christmas addresses) since defusing the attempted military coup of February 23, 1981. In his speech, he made no explicit reference to either ETA or al-Qaida. Queen Sofía, the Prince of Asturias, and the Prince's fiancée Letizia Ortiz visited the wounded and medical personnel at Gregorio Marañón hospital. King Juan Carlos I His Majesty King Juan Carlos I (Juan Carlos Alfonso Víctor María de Borbón y Borbón), styled HM The King (born January 5, 1938), is the reigning King of Spain. ...
A coup détat (pronounced kÅ« dÄ ta), or simply a coup, is the sudden overthrow of a government, usually done by a small group that just replaces the top power figures. ...
February 23 is the 54th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
1981 is a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Queen Sofía Her Majesty Queen Sofía (Sofía de Grecia y Hannover), styled HM The Queen, is the queen of Spain, wife of King Juan Carlos of Spain. ...
His Royal Highness Felipe, Prince of Asturias (Felipe Juan Pablo Alfonso de Todos los Santos de Borbón y de Grecia), styled HRH The Prince of Asturias (born January 30, 1968), is the third child of King Juan Carlos of Spain and Queen Sofía. ...
HRH The Princess of Asturias Her Royal Highness The Princess of Asturias, (Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano), born September 15, 1972), is the wife of Felipe, Prince of Asturias, the heir apparent to the Spanish throne. ...
On 12 March, some 11.4 million people, more than a quarter of Spain's 40 million population, demonstrated in cities across the country. This tally competes with the imprecise figure of 10 million protesters worldwide for the protests against the Iraq war on 15 February 2003, which the Guinness Book of Records listed as the largest mass protest movement in history. On the same day, U.S. President George W. Bush led an observance at the residence of the Spanish ambassador in Washington, laying a wreath at the flagpole and speaking there. He also gave interviews with a Spanish television network. [1] March 12 is the 71st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (72nd in Leap years). ...
Thousands of small and large global protests against war in general, the U.S. plan to invade Iraq and the war itself were held from 2002 to 2005. ...
February 15 is the 46th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The Guinness Book of Records (or in recent editions Guinness World Records, and in previous US editions Guinness Book of World Records) is a reference book published annually, containing an internationally recognized collection of world records, both human achievements and the extrema of the natural world. ...
George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is a politician and the current (43rd) president of the United States. ...
Two million of Madrid's four million citizens demonstrated in the pouring rain, chanting cries such as "we were all on that train", "we're not all here, 200 are missing", "Spain united will never be defeated", "They are chickens without their guns," or "Murderers, murderers". Originally planned as a march from Plaza de Colón to Atocha, the demonstration filled the entire planned route of the march and the adjacent streets. Located in the Alonso MartÃnez barrio (district) of Madrid, Spain, this plaza and its fountain commemorate Christopher Columbus, who was responsible for ushering in the Spanish imperial golden age of the 16th and 17th centuries. ...
The Prince of Asturias and his sisters Elena and Cristina took part in the demonstration - the first time in history a member of the Spanish royal family has done so. Antonio María Cardinal Rouco, Archbishop of Madrid, also took part in his first demonstration. Prime Minister Aznar, European Commission head Romano Prodi, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Portuguese Prime Minister José Manuel Durão Barroso, British Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin also took part, as did the German, Swedish, and Moroccan ministers of foreign affairs. Her Royal Highness Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo (Elena MarÃa Isabel Dominica de los Silos de Borbón y de Grecia de Marichalar), styled HRH The Infanta Elena (born December 20, 1963), is the eldest daughter of King Juan Carlos and Queen SofÃa, and second in the line...
Her Royal Highness, The Infanta Cristina, Duchess of Palma de Mallorca (Cristina Federica Victoria Antonia de la Santísima Trinidad de Borbón y de Grecia de Urdangarín), styled HRH The Infanta Cristina (born June 13, 1965), is the youngest daughter of King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofía. ...
Silvio Berlusconi listen? (born September 29, 1936 in Milan) is the current Prime Minister of Italy and is the leader of the Forza Italia political movement, a party which was established for his entry into politics. ...
José Manuel Durão Barroso (pronunced: IPA, ) (born in Lisbon, March 23, 1956) is a Portuguese politician. ...
John Prescott The Right Honourable John Leslie Prescott (born May 31, 1938) is a British Labour Party politician who is presently Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. ...
Jean-Pierre Raffarin Jean-Pierre Raffarin listen (born August 3, 1948) is a French conservative politician. ...
One and a half million people turned out in Barcelona, under the slogan Avui jo també sóc madrileny ("Today I too am Madrilenian"). Tens of thousands turned out in Bilbao, Seville, Valencia, and other cities across Spain. In some cities, turnout for the protests actually exceeded the city's population, due to inflows from surrounding regions. Barcelona within Barcelonès Population (2003) 1,582,738 Area 1004 Km2 Population density (2001) 15,764/Km2 Barcelona is the capital of Catalonia, Spain, a region in northeastern Spain (41°23′ N 2°11′ E). ...
Geography > Europe > Spain > Basque Country > Biscay Cityscape of Bilbao, with the Guggenheim Museum on the bottom right Bilbao from satellite (NASA World Wind Landsat) Bilbao (Basque: Bilbo) is a city in northern Spain, the largest city in the Pais Vasco and the capital of the province of Vizcaya (Basque: Bizkaia). ...
The Giralda Tower Seville (Spanish: Sevilla) is the artistic, cultural, and financial capital of southern Spain, crossed by the river Guadalquivir (37° 22Ⲡ38ⳠN 5° 59Ⲡ13ⳠW). ...
Valencia from space, June 1996 The Hemispheric at the Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències by Santiago Calatrava, Valencia, Spain. ...
3,000 people gathered before Popular Party headquarters at Calle Génova in Madrid starting after 5pm, marching through Puerta del Sol to Atocha after Midnight. The demonstration grew to 5,000 people at Atocha. Dwindling, but still in the thousands, demonstrators returned to Popular Party headquarters around 4:00 AM on Sunday morning. In Barcelona, a march of 150 people banging pots started around 7:40 PM at Rambla de Canaletas and grew to 3,000 before it turned into a demonstration at Plaza de Sant Jaume. 7,000 people demonstrated in front of the Catalan Popular Party headquarters, also in Barcelona. 1,500 people demonstrated in Santiago de Compostela, 1,200 in Zaragoza and 1,000 in Valencia. In other cities gatherings numbered in the hundreds. Spontaneous demonstrations, largely directed against ETA, broke out across Spain as the news of the attack became known, in advance of scheduled demonstrations set for the following day at 19:00. [2] Lehendakari (Basque Country President) Juan José Ibarretxe condemned the attacks, saying that "when ETA attacks, the Basque heart breaks into a thousand pieces". He invited the Basque population to demonstrate in silence in front of city halls and municipal buildings. This article is about the traditional Basque domain. ...
Juan José Ibarretxe Juan José Ibarretxe Markuartu (born May 15, 1957) is a Basque politician. ...
The Spanish general election Spain's Socialists scored a dramatic upset in elections 14 March, unseating conservatives stung by charges they provoked the Madrid terror bombings by supporting the U.S led war in Iraq and making Spain a target for al-Qaida. Until the attacks the People's Party appeared to have a good chance to win a third consecutive term in power, although it was expected to take a plurality of seats in Congress (the lower house of parliament) rather than the majority they held since March 2000. It was the first time a government that backed the Iraq war had been up for re-election, and it lost. Incoming prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero pledged to bring home the 1,300 troops that Spain has stationed in Iraq when their tour of duty ends in July 2004. March 14 is the 73rd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (74th in Leap years) with 292 days remaining in the year. ...
Legislative elections were held in Spain on March 12, 2000. ...
The surprise defeat of the Popular Party was widely attributed to anger amongst voters that the government was not, in their view, being honest about the investigation of the attacks, while initially blaming the attack on ETA. The government had insisted that its prime suspect in the bombings was ETA, even as evidence mounted of an Islamic link. The government was accused of withholding information on the investigation to save the election. Voters turned out in large numbers to cast their vote, many of them wearing the black ribbon symbols of national grief. Turnout soared to 77.2 percent from 68.7 at the last general election in 2000. For details of the election result, see Spanish general election, 2004. Ribbon of Spanish grief. ...
2000 is a leap year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Map of Spains electoral circumscriptions, and the parties leading in each circumscription in the election for the Congress of Deputies Legislative elections were held in Spain on March 14, 2004. ...
It will always be uncertain whether or not the outcome of the election was the result of the attacks on March 11. However, there exists some significant data. For example, the mail vote (mostly cast before the attack) followed a distribution far more similar to what was expected by opinion polls (that is, the Popular Party was still the winner although it lost votes compared to the results in 2000). Also, if the results obtained on March 14 would have been the same than those of the European election three months later (when the Socialist Party had been governing for less than two months) the Socialist Party had also won with 162 seats but the Popular Party would have obtained 161 seats; a closer result than the real one (the Socialist Party won with 168 seats and the Popular Party obtained only 148).
See also The 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks (also known as 11/3, 3/11, M-11 and 11-M) were a series of coordinated terrorist bombings against the commuter train system of Madrid, Spain on the morning of 11 March 2004, which killed 191 people and wounded more than 1,800. ...
External links - The Aftershocks from Madrid
In Spanish - 11-M Redes para ganar una guerra
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