PARIS (AP) — The last known chief of ETA, the now-extinct Basque separatist militant group, was back in court Monday in Paris to face terrorism charges that he deems "absurd" because of his role in ending a conflict that claimed hundreds of lives and terrorized Spain for half a century.
Josu Urrutikoetxea led ETA during one of its bloodiest periods, when its victims included children bombed to death while sleeping in a Zaragoza police compound, where a monument to their stolen lives now stands. In a rare interview after 17 years on the run, he offered an apology, advised other separatist movements against resorting to violence and painted himself as a changed man.
That's a preposterous claim to those who lost loved ones to ETA's violence, which caused around 850 deaths and thousands of injuries and hijacked the Basque and Spanish political debate for decades. Just because he oversaw ETA's end in 2018, they stress, that doesn't erase his past.
A judge at the Paris appeal court on Monday postponed the first of two back-to-back trials to February next year because some of the witnesses couldn't make it to Monday's hearing because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Spanish anti-terrorism investigators have depicted him as a bloodthirsty advocate of violence who only opportunistically pursued negotiations after police crackdowns and a shrinking support base from Basque separatists weakened ETA.
Now 69, diminished by a battle with cancer and facing the prospect of spending the twilight of a life devoted to Basque independence behind bars, the man widely known by his police alias Josu Ternera, or "The Calf," says he's sorry for the "irreparable damage" caused by ETA violence as it sought to build an independent state straddling the Pyrenees mountains between Spain and France.

But even when he admits regrets, he adds a caveat.
Asked if he would apologize to ETA victims' families, he told The Associated Press: "Of course, (I offer) apologies for something that we can't repair."
But he insisted Basque's independence movement suffered, too, from violence rooted in the Spanish dictatorship that ended more than four decades ago, and mainly from rogue groups within the Spanish government that in the 1980s tortured and killed nearly 30 ETA members and other militants.
"The Basque country was entering into a black hole" of cultural repression, Urrutikoetxea said, "and we had to do the maximum to pull it out."
Some of ETA's victims said they want more than apologies; they want him to face justice.
"I don't seek revenge against Josu Ternera," said Lucía Ruiz, who was 10 when she was injured in the 1987 blast targeting military police barracks in Zaragoza, where she lived with her father, a civil guard. "But this gentleman tried to kill me and I want for him to pay a price for it. It's my right as a Spanish citizen."
Since his long-awaited arrest last year, Urrutikoetxea has been on a campaign to shed the terrorist label and rebrand himself as a repentant, aging peacemaker.
Amid growing international support, he won conditional release in July pending trial, after lawyers argued his poor health made him vulnerable to contracting coronavirus. He's now staying with a professor friend near Paris' Place de la Republique where he is trying to get a college diploma and is allowed out a few hours a day with an electronic bracelet.
In a petition published Saturday, former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, academic social critic Noam Chomsky, separatist Catalan ex-president Carles Puigdemont and more than 250 other intellectuals called for France and Spain to end Urrutikoetxea's "outrageous and intolerable" prosecution.
By putting him on trial, they argue, "France is implicitly criminalizing all negotiators and calling into question all current and future peace processes in the world."