Antonio Tejero

Antonio Tejero with a gun in his hand, breaking into the Congress of Deputies February 23, 1981, attempting a coup. Below to the right is the defence minister Manuel GutiÃÂérrez Mellado
He entered the Guardia Civil in 1951 and was the leader of the Comandancia in GuipÃÂúzcoa, but had to ask to be transferred to another region when his public declarations against the IkurriÃÂña was known. His life is filled with pro-coup episodes, and he played an important role of the coups during the transiciÃÂón in San Sebastian, MÃÂálaga and Madrid. He was the captain-general of the third military region, until the event of 23-F took place.
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2 Aftermath 3 Conspiracy theories 4 External links 5 Books |
23-F: The attempted coup, February 23, 1981
On Febrero 23, 1981, at 6.21pm, Antonio Tejero together with a group of 200 Guardia Civil armed officers stormed into the Spanish Congress of Deputies, the lower house of the Cortes. When they entered, the Congress was about to elect the new Prime Minister (Presidente del Gobierno) Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo, who would take the place of Adolfo SuÃÂárez.
At the same time, many military leaders close to Tejero, led by General Milans de Bosch, declared a state of emergency and ordered tanks out on the street in Valencia. After several hours, the King Juan Carlos held a televised speech at 01:14AM, voicing his condemnation of the coup and that SpainÃÂÃÂs democratic process should continue peacefully. The occupants of the Congress surrendered the morning after without harming anyone, having held hostage Spain's parliament and Cabinet for 18 hours.
Alfonso Armada was released July 1, 1990, claiming he never did anything illegal. Tejero, being the last one left of the coup leaders in jail, was set free after 15 years from the military prison in AlcalÃÂá de Henares on December 2, 1996. He now lives in AlahurÃÂÃÂn de la Torre close to Malaga.
Later it has been known that the coup plans originated from Bosch. According to these plans, General Alfonso Armada was supposed to be Prime Minister if the coup succeded.
Aftermath
Tejero was arrested outside the Congress building, and both he and Milans de Bosch were sentenced to 30 years in prison. Armada was arrested February 28, 1981, and sentenced to 6 years in prison. He was released December 24, 1988, insisting that he had been a victim of a conspiracy set up by Tejero. In all 30 of the 33 suspected set on trial for the attempted coup were convicted.Conspiracy theories
There are people who believe that King Juan Carlos plotted the coup to test the democratic system and increase his personal support, as many politicians at the time disliked the constitutional monarchy. However, there is no hard evidence of the King's complicity in a plot.External links
Books