This article is about the paramilitary group supporting Catalan independence from Spain, active from 1976 to 1980. For the Civil War-era military unit, see People's Army of Catalonia.
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The Catalan People's Army (Exèrcit Popular Català, EPOCA), known by its members as La Casa,[1] was a Catalan nationalistparamilitary group which existed during the 1970s.[2]
History
The group was founded in 1969, as a breakaway group of the National Front of Catalonia.[3] Jaume Martínez Vendrell, the leader of the military wing of the National Front, became its commander.[4][5] EPOCA trained its militants in urban warfare techniques, smuggling in weaponry from Switzerland.[6]
The group came to prominence through a number of assassinations, committed by attaching pressure-triggered bombs to the bodies of their victims, demanding ransoms, and when they weren't received, leaving the bombs to explode, killing their victims in the process.[7][8] In this way, the group assassinated in 1977 the industrialist and chemical tycoon José María Bultó, and in 1978 the ex-mayor of Barcelona, Joaquín Viola, along with his wife.[9][10][11]
By 1979, the group had become inactive in comparison with many other contemporary groups. Following discussions with paramilitaries from Terra Lliure, the groups decided to merge.[11][12][1] This led to many of the better-trained EPOCA militants joining Terra Lliure.[12]
Trials and justice
Seven people were arrested in connection with the killings of Bultó and the Violas.[13] Two of them were tried in 1980; one was acquitted entirely, whilst Martínez Vendrell, the other, was sentenced to a year and three months in prison, although this was not directly related to the assassinations.[14] However, he had already served this time awaiting trial, so was immediately released.[15] The remaining five were tried in 1982, saying at the time that they "learned of the assassination through the newspapers and television".[16]
A number of additional arrests were made towards the end of 1980 in connection with the construction of the bombs that were used in the killings.[17]
^ abJiménez Ramos, María; Domínguez Iribarren, Florencio; Marrodán Ciordia, Javier (2019). Heridos y olvidados : los supervivientes del terrorismo en España [Injured and forgotten: the survivors of terrorism in Spain] (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. ISBN978-84-9164-520-7. OCLC1090543709.
^"Dinero para un ejército independentista catalán". El País (Basque Country ed.). 6 August 2016. ProQuest1809118993.
^Cornellà-Detrell, Jordi (2018). "La circulació de llibres clandestins durant el franquisme" [The circulation of clandestine books during the era of Franco]. Querol (in Catalan). No. 22. pp. 44–50. Retrieved 22 June 2020. ho va fer un comando de l'Exèrcit Popular Català dirigit per Jaume Martínez Vendrell.
^"El resurgir de Terra Lliure" [The resurgence of Terra Lliure]. Observatorio de Seguridad y Defensa (in European Spanish). 16 October 2017. Retrieved 2020-06-22.
^Cuesta, Carlos (8 October 2013). "Maravillosos moderados" [Marvellous moderates]. El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid. ProQuest1439935055.
^Segura Julian, Martí (30 June 2017). Terrorism: understanding Terra Lliure using the Structural-Cognitive Model (Master's degree thesis). Leiden University. hdl:1887/83829.
^Sánchez Soler, Mariano, 1954- (2010). La transición sangrienta : una historia violenta del proceso democrático en España, 1975-1983 (1a ed.). Barcelona: Península. ISBN978-84-9942-001-1. OCLC609530404.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Ucelay da Cal, Enric (2018). Breve historia del separatismo catalán [A brief history of Catalan separatism] (in Spanish) (First ed.). Barcelona: Penguin Random House. p. 213. ISBN978-84-666-6511-7. OCLC1078344963.