Politicians and citizens on Monday commemorated the ninth anniversary of the
March 2004 Madrid train bombings, the biggest terrorist attack in Spain since
the 1970s transition to democracy.
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy was one of the first to refer to the Al
Qaeda-perpetrated attacks, which claimed the lives of 191 people on various
trains outside the capital’s main Atocha station on March 11, 2004.
At a breakfast meeting, the Popular Party (PP) leader told prominent
government figures and party members that he was committed to the “eradication
of terrorism,” saying freedom, democracy and life itself have “ferocious
enemies.” “They will never defeat us,” he added.
At the same event, PP secretary general María Dolores de Cospedal said that
March 11, 2004 was “without any doubt [...] the most difficult moment the PP
ever experienced.”
A short time before, Madrid regional premier Ignacio González and the city’s
mayor, Ana Botella, laid a wreath at a plaque commemorating the victims of the
attack in Puerta del Sol in the city center.
The brief ceremony was also attended by Justice Minister Alberto
Ruiz-Gallardón and Education, Culture and Sport Minister José Ignacio Wert, as
well as the presidents of the Association of Terrorism Victims and the
Association of 11-M Victims, Ángeles Pedraza and Ángeles Domínguez.
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