Showing posts with label Dolors Bassa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dolors Bassa. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 June 2018

800 miles, for 40 minutes through armour-plated glass

It is 395 miles, from Barcelona to Estremera Prison, and 366 to Alcalá de Henares, where Carme Forcadell and Dolors Bassa, the women political prisoners are held. That is a twice-a-month twelve-hour there-and-back slog on Spanish motorways, or more than €300* in train and taxi fares. And all that, for a too-brief moment of snatched conversation with your husband, mother, father, sister…

The political prisoners are held on remand. They are innocent men and women, who have not been convicted of any crimes. But Spanish high court judge Pablo Llarena has refused to allow them to move to a prison nearer home. And yesterday the Constitutional Court again refused a request for release from Josep Rull and Jordi Turull.




The 800 mile round trip represents one or two entire days out of the lives of the prisoners’ families, each fortnight. It’s hard to hold down a job, or keep the kids busy at school, if you have to be in a Spanish prison one day in fourteen. And that is without calculating the cost of food and accommodation.


Children who cannot visit their imprisoned parent regularly suffer emotionally and at school, according to researchers in the USA. Meanwhile, a report from the UK’s HM Inspectorate of Prisons, featured in the Howard League for Penal Reform blog, says that each 25-mile unit of distance means fewer visits to the prisoner. And researchers “suggest that the lives of women who support a family member in custody closely resemble those of women who are themselves incarcerated, as both often struggle with poverty, trauma and precarity.”



What can you do?


Donate to the prisoners’ families fund, The Catalan Association for
Civil Rights, which is helping to cover the costs of visits. You'll find details on our What you can Do page.

Write to the new Spanish President to demand the release of the political prisoners. For his address, and more actions, see our page on what you can do




*Estimate based on current Renfe rail price Barcelona-Madrid return, midweek, for one adult and two children.



Tuesday, 22 May 2018

Imagine (imagineu-vos)

Before you read another word, sentence, STOP! GOOGLE the word ‘imagine’.

You, if like me will see the image of a YouTube video with the face of John Lennon and a link to the emblematic song ‘Imagine’.

A song of hope. A utopia. Naively idealistic, but at the very least a signpost to the path of a better future.

Some FORTY SEVEN years later I read, ‘Tanqueu els ulls i imagineu-vos…..’ ‘Close your eyes and imagine….’.

https://www.vilaweb.cat/noticies/tanqueu-els-ulls-i-imagineu-vos-el-conte-de-montse-bassa-sobre-la-vida-a-alcala-meco/
‘Close your eyes and imagine..,’ the first few words of the account published in Vilaweb written by Montse Bassa about her sister Dolors Bassa, the Catalan political prisoner, now held indefinitely since 23 March in Alcalà de Henares prison, Spain.

Montse Bassa describes how Dolors Bassa is held in a cell 16 hours a day. Rudimentary furniture. A toilet with no lid. Shower. Iron framed bed. Wooden bench for a seat. Grey walls with an iron door. A window with a view to a barbed wire wall.

Access to the library is limited. A monotonous diet. The humiliation of how water and toilet paper are obtained.

The pain and emotion of those rare moments of family visits…through glass and by way of a dodgy microphone.

Resolve is found in thoughts of freedom and the injustice Dolors Bassa and the other political prisoners have to bear. Dolors finds strength in the support of the Catalan people. Dolors sleeps with thoughts of home. Montgrì.

THIS IS NOT THE ‘IMAGINE’ JOHN LENNON HAD IN MIND.