Hoax Closes Airport for Evacuation, Search

July 2, 2007

By Harold Heckle

The Associated Press

MADRID, Spain

Spanish police acting on what appears to have been a hoax evacuated Ibiza airport Saturday after a telephone bomb threat and safely destroyed a suspicious bag in a controlled explosion, the Interior Ministry said.

After the warning, police evacuated and searched the airport, found two suspicious items - a shoe box and a backpack in the airport parking lot - and destroyed the bag.

The shoe box was searched by a remote-controlled robot and found to be empty, the ministry said.

The telephone warning came from the Basque newspaper Gara, which the violent Basque separatist group ETA often uses as a conduit for bomb warnings.

A spokeswoman for the AENA airport authority, which controls Spain's airports, said that by Saturday afternoon the airport had returned to normal. Around 13,000 travelers were affected by flight disruptions caused by the airport's temporary closure, she said.

The telephone threat was made just weeks after ETA called off a 15-month cease-fire, blaming the government for refusing to make concessions in the peace process and warning it was once again becoming active "on all fronts."

ETA, whose name stands for Basque Homeland and Freedom, has killed more than 800 people since 1968 in its campaign for a separate Basque state.

It is classified as a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union.

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