The Segovia prison break (Spanish: Fuga de Segovia) occurred in Segovia, Spain on 5 April 1976 when 29 political prisoners escaped from Segovia prison. This was the largest prison break in Spain since the Spanish Civil War. The prisoners escaped by means of tunnels they had excavated and then through the prison's drainage system. Hidden in a truck, they fled in the direction of the French border. Before reaching the border, their escape plans broke down and they found themselves stranded and lost in woodland in Navarre. Most of them were recaptured after a confrontation with the Civil Guards in Espinal, during which one of the prisoners was shot dead. The remaining four escapees managed to cross the French border and were detained by the French government, but escaped once again. In 1977, the Spanish authorities declared a general amnesty, after which the escapees were freed or could return to Spain.
Background
editIn the final years of Francoist Spain, the issue of "political prisoners" had grown in importance.[1] Numerous demonstrations in support of an amnesty for political prisoners had taken place, including a general strike in the Basque country in December 1974[1] and a protest on the day of the escape.[2] Following Franco's death in October 1975, the new head of state, king Juan Carlos, signed a partial amnesty. Despite this, over 600 political prisoners remained incarcerated throughout Spain, with a substantial number of them having connections to the armed Basque separatist group ETA.[1]
The previous most successful escape involving ETA prisoners had occurred in December 1969, when 15 political prisoners, including 10 ETA members, had escaped from Basauri prison in Biscay.[3] The Segovia escape would be the largest escape since the Spanish Civil War[4] and the biggest of numerous escape attempts organised by ETA.[5]
Planning and preparation
editThose planning to escape learnt from Communist Party prisoners, who had been incarcerated longer, that there was a wall space which could be used in an escape attempt. Plans were made for 54 prisoners to escape on 2 August 1975,[6] however, the escape was thwarted after an undercover agent learned of the plans.
Following that, preparations began anew.[7] At this point, the prison contained 53 political prisoners and 7 prison guards.[8] The number of prisoners planned to escape was reduced due to the added security following the thwarted escape and the transfer of some of the original 54 planned escapees to other prisons.[6] Some prisoners, including senior Communist party members, declined to take part.[9] In total, 29 prisoners took part in the escape, 25 of these belonging to ETA, with the others members of leftist armed group FRAP. In total, the prisoners had been sentenced to more than 1,500 years in prison.[3]
Priority was given to prisoners serving longer sentences.[7] A camera had been smuggled into the prison for the previous attempt in order to photograph the participants, so that identity documents and false passports could be prepared.[6] Parcels containing civilian clothing had also been smuggled into the prison.[7]
As with the August attempt, the escape was led by ETA, who carried out a detailed study of the prison to identify weak points which could be exploited in an escape.[7] They concluded that the prison's drainage system would offer the best chance and began searching for the quickest way to reach it. Tests on the prison's walls revealed a hollow space behind the toilets and preparations for the escape attempt began in October 1975.[7] Using a piece of metal taken from the prison's lumberyard, the prisoners removed six tiles to create a crawl space, through which they could reach the hollow space and begin tunnelling.[7] To hide their work, they replaced the tiles and built a concealed door. Other prisoners assisted in the escape by making noise during the periods when the excavation of the tunnel was taking place.[7]
Having spent a month working to reach the hollow space, the prisoners' work became easier due to the hidden door. Up to five prisoners took turns digging a tunnel towards the exterior of the prison. After digging for two metres they found that they had entered the drainage tunnels below the prison and sawed through the bars to reach these.[7]
Escape
editAt 14:00, the prisoners changed into civilian clothes and took advantage of a gap between roll calls to make their escape through the tunnel, using torches that they had made in the prison for visibility.[8] A support unit of four people was waiting outside the prison with a truck, documents, guns and money.[7] Deciding that the Portuguese border was too heavily policed, their plan was to escape to France, so they drove towards Pamplona. After 50 kilometres (31 mi) they changed vehicles, forcing the drivers of a trailer to drive them to Espinal at gunpoint.[7] From there, the plan had been to cross the France–Spain border on foot, but thick fog resulted in them becoming disoriented and lost in the woodland and hilly terrain.[7]
Discovery and recaptures
editAt 17:45, a roll call was taken in the prison and the escape was discovered. A massive manhunt commenced, with police and Civil Guards setting up roadblocks at strategic positions.[8]
The group of fugitives had split up and the majority were recaptured during shootouts on 6 April. In the first shootout, at 02:00,[10] one of the fugitives was killed and one fugitive and one Civil Guard injured.[8] The five surviving fugitives from this shootout surrendered.[10]
At 11:00, another group of fourteen escapees became involved in a shootout with Civil Guards in Burguete, which resulted in the capture of five of them. The remainder of this group escaped to the hillside nearby, but, at 14:00, eight of the group returned to the town and asked the owner of the first house that they came upon to contact the parish priest. Through the priest's mediation, they gave themselves up to the Civil Guards.[10] In total, twenty-one of the prisoners had been recaptured on the day after the escape.[8]
On the morning of 8 April, another fugitive was recaptured near Agoitz. He had been wounded in the arm during one of the shootouts.[11] With the capture of two more escapees at midday on 9 April, only four escapees remained at large.[10]
The remaining fugitives entered a chalet near the French border and, finding it unoccupied, decided to wait there. They changed their clothes and fortified the chalet, in case the authorities should discover them there.[7] On Saturday 9 April, a nearby chalet became occupied. The escapees considered kidnapping the occupants of this chalet and using their car but rejected the idea. They decided to wait until the owner of their chalet appeared, reasoning that, as it was Holy Week, he would use the chalet soon.[7] They seized him when he arrived on 12 April and asked him to drive them to Pamplona, but he refused. On Maundy Thursday, 15 April, they tied him up, gave him some money for his inconvenience and used his car to drive to Pamplona and crossed the border to France from there.[7] They presented themselves at The Office of Stateless Refugees in Paris on 29 April. They were interned on the Island of Yeu.[7] On 9 June 1976 they escaped from Yeu, releasing a communique stating that, as they felt they had exhausted all legal routes to regain their freedom, they felt this was the only alternative left to them.[12]
Those who had been detained in Spain were taken to Pamplona, from where they were dispersed to prisons in southern Spain.[9] In March, May and October 1977, a series of laws led to the release of remaining political prisoners.[13]
In popular culture
editÁngel Amigo, one of the 29 participants, wrote a book, Operación Poncho, detailing the escape. In 1981, Imanol Uribe adapted the book into a film, La fuga de Segovia, which won the critic's award for best film at the 1982 San Sebastián International Film Festival.[14] The film was a box-office hit in the Basque Country over Star Wars and Superman.[15]
References
edit- ^ a b c Muro, Diego (2010). The Politics and Memory of Democratic Transition: The Spanish Model. Routledge. p. 161–2. ISBN 978-1136852244.
- ^ Nuevos desórdenes públicos en la manifestación pro-amnistía no autorizada, La Vanguardia, p1, 6 April 1976
- ^ a b García, Javier (8 July 1985). "La fuga de Segovia, la evasion mas espectacular". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ "12 terrorists on the loose". The Age. Melbourne. 7 April 1976. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
- ^ "Fracasados todos los intentos de fuga de presos etarras en España". El Mundo (in Spanish). 13 June 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ a b c "Los fugados de la cárcel de Segovia cuentan la historia 35 años después". Qué! (in Spanish). Spain. 26 March 1977. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ceberio, Jesús (15 May 1976). "Los evadidos de Segovia cuentan su fuga". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 16 June 2016.
- ^ a b c d e Martin, Pablo (7 April 1976). "Han sido capturados veintidós de los fugados de Segovia". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). pp. 3–4. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ a b "La fuga de la cárcel de Segovia". El Periódico de Catalunya (in Spanish). 11 March 2005. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ a b c d "Han detenidos otros dos de los fugados de la cárcel de Segovia". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 9 April 1976. p. 7. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ "Varios de los fugados de la cárcel de Segovia han conseguido llegar a Francia". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 7 April 1976. p. 6. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ Fidalgo, Feliciano (10 June 1976). "Se fugan los vascos confinados en Yeu". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ Lessa, Francesca (2012). Amnesty in the Age of Human Rights Accountability: Comparative and International Perspectives. Cambridge University Press. p. 318–9. ISBN 978-1107025004.
- ^ Angulo, Javier (28 January 1982). "La película 'La fuga de Segovia' se estrena en Madrid precedida de un éxito insólito en el País Vasco". El País (in Spanish). Bilbao. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- ^ Belategui, Oskar (18 November 2021). "40 años de la fuga de ETA que inventó el cine vasco". El Correo (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 February 2022.