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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Spanish exiles' Latin America families in passport rush

Spanish exiles' Latin America families in passport rush
28 December 2011 Last updated at 06:21 GMT

An estimated 180,000 Cubans could be eligible

Large numbers of people in Latin America have rushed to apply for
Spanish citizenship on the final day descendants of civil war-era exiles
were eligible to apply.

The scheme was open to people whose parents or grandparents fled Spain
under Franco and during the 1936-39 civil war.

Since 2008 more than 200,000 people have been recognised as Spanish.

Most applicants were in Latin America, particularly Cuba and Argentina.

The Historic Memory Law was passed by Spain's former socialist
government in 2007.

A provision added in 2008 - known as the Law of Grandchildren - offered
citizenship to anyone whose parents or grandparents were born in Spain
but left the country between 1936 and 1955.

A three-year period during which applications could be made expired on
Tuesday.
'Grateful'

A large queue formed outside the Spanish consulate in the Cuban capital,
Havana, as people rushed to beat the deadline.

"I am very satisfied to have done this on the last possible day," Cuban
pensioner Jorge Vallos told the Associated Press after submitting his
application.

"Everyone is trying to take advantage of this in order to travel and to
be able to visit our families," teacher Daisy Ramos said.

Spanish embassy officials say that up to 180,000 Cubans could be
eligible for Spanish citizenship - more than 1% of Cuba's population.

Long queues also formed outside the Spanish consulate in the Argentine
capital, Buenos Aires.

More than 60,000 Argentines have already been given Spanish citizenship,
out of about 300,000 who are thought to be eligible - the largest number
in any one country.

But most are not expected to go to live in Spain, which is suffering an
economic crisis and high unemployment.
Soldiers of Gen Franco's Nationalists escort captured Republican troops
in the Spanish Civil War Citizenship was also offered to foreign
volunteers who fought in the International Brigades

"For now I am staying here," Argentine Daniel Garcia told Reuters after
making his application. "I am doing it to be able to travel and to have
the passport."

Latin America accounts for more than 90% of those seeking citizenship,
with large numbers applying in Mexico and Venezuela.

Outside the region, the most applications have been in France, where
many Spanish Republicans took refuge after their defeat in the civil war.

The Spanish foreign ministry says that - as of 31 August - citizenship
had been granted to 213,787 people out of 378,862 applications.

The total by the end of the process is expected to reach 300,000. Those
granted Spanish passports do not have to give up their current citizenship.
Bitter legacy

About half-a-million people were killed during the 1936-39 Spanish Civil
War, in which a nationalist military revolt led by General Francisco
Franco overthrew a left-wing Republican government.

An estimated 500,000 people died in the war, and political killings and
persecution continued during Gen Franco's long dictatorship, which only
ended with his death in 1975.

The Historic Memory Law passed under the previous socialist government
was aimed at addressing the legacy of the conflict.

It offered compensation to the victims and help in finding the bodies of
the dead, many of whom were buried in secret mass graves.

But the measure proved controversial in a country still divided by the
Civil War. It was opposed by the conservative Popular Party, which won
power in this November's general election.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-16342340

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