Basque for "Basque Homeland and Freedom."

The ETA, founded in 1959, is a Basque separatist group that fights for an independent Basque state in northern Spain. They use urban warfare, mainly car bombs and other explosives to attack prominent politicians, judges, policemen and soldiers. The organization finances its campaign through kidnapping, bank robbery and a so-called "revolutionary tax" on Basque businesses -- a payment that is widely regarded as extortion.

On September 16, 1998, they declared a "unilateral and indefinite" cease-fire, but in November 1999, they started bombing again. The Basque people are the oldest indigenous ethnic group in Europe. They have lived uninterrupted in the same region since the beginning of recorded history. The country has a population of about 3 million. In a recent election the ETA's representatives received only 200,000 votes: at this point the majority of Basques do not support the campaign of violence.