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| | The Observer | International | Eta women emerge as top guns terror war |
 | | Eleven murders have been attributed by the police to hardliner María Soledad Iparragirre Genetxea, 39, whom they say is set to become the military leader of the group which last week killed its thirteenth victim since ending a truce in December. |
 | | Born in the Basque village of Escoriaza and known as 'Anboto', she is on track to replace Ignacio Gracía Arregi, arrested in France last weekend, as head of Eta's military apparatus. |
 | | Iparragirre's promotion bodes ill for future negotiations, since she is described as a hardliner opposed to the truce called by the old troika of Gracía Arregi, Kantauri, and Miguel Albizu, or Mikel Antza, who heads Eta's political apparatus and remains in the new triumvirate. |
| observer.guardian.co.uk /international/story/0,6903,372497,00.html (873 words) |
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