Hope Fades for Madrid Airport Bombing's 2 Missing Victims

At the bomb site, crews continued for a fourth straight day to use heavy machinery to remove tons of concrete and metal at the five-story parking garage.
Jan. 3, 2007
3 min read

Four days after a powerful car bomb attack at Madrid's airport, blamed on the Basque separatist group ETA, rescue workers were giving up hope Wednesday of finding alive two people caught up in the explosion.

Two Ecuadorean men believed to have been sleeping inside two separate parked cars were missing in the rubble of the blast, which injured 26 people.

The government has suspended further negotiations with ETA, which declared a cease-fire nine months ago.

At the bomb site, crews continued for a fourth straight day to use heavy machinery to remove tons of concrete and metal at the five-story parking garage at Madrid's international airport, largely destroyed in the explosion on Saturday.

"The temperatures reached in the area are incompatible with life," said Alfonso del Alamo, director of Madrid's emergency services.

He said some 154 charred cars have been removed from the site, all unrecognizable as vehicles, but that they had yet to find the cars the Ecuadorean men were in. The garage had 600 cars in it at the time of the attack.

Del Alamo added that police believe the men's cars may have been moved by the shock wave from the blast, and that they may have died in the ensuing fire.

"Although this hypothesis is not ruled out, we still work with the hope of finding the bodies and that these can be recognized," Del Alamo said, adding that the explosion caused one of the biggest fires in Madrid in recent years

Madrid town hall has estimated that 40,000 tons of rubble will have to be removed from the bomb site at the airport's gleaming new Terminal 4.

The bombing broke a nine-month cease-fire that the ETA had said was permanent. ETA has not claimed responsibility for the attack, but a caller who warned authorities before the explosion said he represented the group.

ETA and its political supporters had complained in recent months that a peace process aimed at ending the violence was stillborn because the government was refusing to make preliminary concessions, such as moving ETA prisoners from jails around Spain to the Basque region itself and halting police arrests and trials of ETA suspects and pro-independence politicians

ETA's fight for an independent Basque state has killed more than 800 people since the 1960s.

If the two men are found dead and Saturday's bombings is definitively linked to the group, it would be ETA's first fatal attack since May 2003. In the aftermath of the bombing, the government suspended plans for peace talks with the separatists.

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