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Tuesday, Dec. 31
The Indiana Daily Student

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ETA blamed in Spanish car bombing

Warning call prompted blast that injured 43 people

MADRID, Spain -- A car bomb exploded in a Madrid business park Wednesday after a warning call purportedly from the Basque separatist group ETA. The explosion injured at least 43 people, officials said, in the worst blast in the Spanish capital since last year's terrorist attack on commuter trains.\nPolice did not have time after the warning call to the Basque newspaper Gara to fully cordon off the area or evacuate workers and visitors at a sprawling convention center nearby, where King Juan Carlos was to meet Mexican President Vicente Fox later in the day.\nThe explosion came hours after police arrested 14 suspected members of ETA and a week after Spain's Parliament overwhelmingly rejected a plan giving the Basque region virtual independence.\nThe bomb exploded at about 9:30 a.m., shattering thick panes of glass in buildings and damaging cars. It detonated near a plaza with a large bust of the king's late father, Juan de Borbon, and outside a building housing the French computer manufacturer Bull.\nInterior Minister Jose Antonio Alonso said the bomb packed an estimated 66 pounds of explosives. It was the worst blast in Spain's capital since the March 11 train bombings, which killed 191 people and were claimed by militants saying they acted on behalf of al-Qaida.\nA witness identified only as Daniel told CNN+ television that the bomb shook his car as he drove about 100 yards away from the blast site.\n"It was an extremely powerful explosion," he said. "The car shook as if something had fallen on top of it."\nAnother witness, Bull communication director Manuel Amenteros, was in a first-floor office about 20 yards from the bomb when it exploded. He said he was thrown to the ground and saw colleagues sprayed with pieces of flying glass.\n"What saved me -- from the force of the blast and from flying glass shards -- was my computer," he told The Associated Press.\nThe injured suffered bruises, cuts from flying glass and damaged eardrums, said Javier Ayuso, spokesman for the Madrid emergency medical service. No one was seriously hurt, he said.\nKing Juan Carlos was scheduled to open an art show at the convention center later Wednesday, accompanied by Fox. Authorities said the ceremony would still be held.\nPrime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero denounced the bombing.\n"ETA and those who support it have no place in political or civil life. Bombs lead only to jail," he said during a visit to Poland.\nThe Interior Ministry said 14 ETA suspects were arrested Tuesday in all three Basque provinces plus areas in northern, eastern and southern Spain.\nThe suspects were involved in recruiting new members, supporting existing commandos and gathering information on potential targets for attack, the ministry said in a statement.\nThe plan, proposed by the Basque regional parliament, calls for Spain to accept "shared sovereignty" over the three-province Basque region, across the Pyrenees mountains from southwest France. That plan was contingent on the absence of ETA violence.\nJuan Jose Ibarretxe, the region's president, responded to the vote by calling early elections for April 17, hoping to capitalize on Basque nationalist anger.

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