I first entered Gibraltar in the early Spring of 1964 in
order to regularise my passport and family documents to allow us to continue to
reside in Spain. In the end with the
help of some local anarchist Gibraltarians, I got a job as an electrician at
Gibraltar airport while living with my family in La Linea. In 1964, relations between Britain and Spain
were relaxed and each working day I and about 10,000 Spaniards crossed the
border clutching our passports in order to work in the British colony. By 1967, things had deteriorated and the
British held a referendum in which a clear majority of Gibraltarains voted to
remain of a British colony with only just over 40 voting to go with Spain. After that Franco closed the La Linea
Frontier and stopped the ferry from Algercires to Gibraltar, meaning that
henceforth departure and entry to the Rock had to be by boat via Morocco or by
air: thus the Spanish workforce was withdrawn
until after the death of Franco in 1975.
None of these recent difficulties involving stricter Spanish border
checks on the pretext to curb tobacco smuggling are new to Gibraltar, and in
the early 19th century there was a siege by the French under
Napoleon.
Fabian Picardo, the
leader of the Gibraltar government, has accused the Spanish government of using
the dispute to divert attention from an ongoing scandal over a slush fund that
has almost drowned the Spanish head of government and his conservative Popular
Party. It is true that there has always
been tobacco smuggling from Gibraltar into Spain; as Spain's Interior
Minister, Jorge Fernandez said last Friday
that Gibraltar could not be 'the frontier of tobacco smuggling,' noting that
Gib. had imported 140 million packs of cigarettes last year, even though it has
only 30,000 residents. The left in Spain
believe the timing of these complaints is to distract public attention from the
Mr. Rajoy's government's other more pressing problems.
El Pais, Spain's leading newspaper, in a recent editorial
entitled 'August Fever' said that a 'realistic vision' ought to take account of
the fact that any concession by Britain over Gibraltar might encourage Morocco
to revive its claims over Spain's own North African enclaves of Ceuta and
Melilla.
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