In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is González and the second or maternal family name is Martín.
Yolanda González
Born
(1961-01-20)January 20, 1961
Died
February 1, 1980(1980-02-01) (aged 19)
Cause of death
Murder
Nationality
Spanish
Occupation
Student
Organization
Worker's Socialist Party (Spain)
Yolanda González Martín (Bilbao, 20 January 1961 - Madrid, 1 February 1980[1]) was a Spanish student and communist militant murdered by two members of New Force.[2]
Biography
Originally from Deusto, González moved to Madrid to study electronics.[3] To fund her education, she worked as a cleaner.[4] She became the student representative of the vocational training school where she studied. She was also a member of the Workers Socialist Party. In February 1980, she was kidnapped, tortured and murdered by some members of New Force. Her body was found on a roadside near Madrid. The organization Batallón Vasco Español claimed responsibility for her murder.[3] On the same day the organisation also murdered Jesús María Zubikarai Badiola in Eibar.[5]
The perpetrators of González' murder were Emilio Hellín and Ignacio Abad Velázquez, who were arrested and sentenced to prison terms.[3] Hellin was sentenced to 43 years in prison, of which he served only 14. In February 2013, El País reported that Hellin, under a false name, was working in communications technology for the Spanish security forces.[6]
Legacy
On more than one anniversary of her murder, the relatives and neighbours of González have led calls for further justice and reparation.[7][8] In 2014 Isabel Rodríguez directed the documentary "Yolanda en el País de los estudiantes", which recounts the kidnapping and subsequent murder of González by the Batallón Vasco-Español.[9]
In 2018 Carlos Fonseca wrote No te olvides de mí: Yolanda González, el crimen más brutal de la Transición. This book brought together a range of sources to focus on her murder.[10]
Both a garden and a public square have been named in her honour. In 2015, the garden Jardines de Yolanda González Martín was named after her in Madrid.[11] In 2018 the sign for the gardens was defaced by fascists.[4] In 2016 there a small square in Deustu was named in her honour.[12][13][14]