In January 1976, some six thousand workers initiated a strike against the decree to limit wage increases for better working conditions and against a decree to limit wage increases. Two months later, they called for the third time for a
general strike, massively followed on 3 March. That same day armed police entered the Church of San Francisco in
Vitoria-Gasteiz, where workers were gathering. The police asked them to leave despite the opposition of the
priest and the
agreement signed by the
Catholic Church and the
Spanish Government stating that police were not to enter any churches by force. Just a few seconds later, the police used
tear gas inside the church, which was crowded. As suffocating workers tried to escape, they were beaten and shot. Pedro María Martínez Ocio, 27, Francisco Aznar Clemente, 17, Romualdo Barroso Chaparro, 19, and José Castillo, 32, were killed. Bienvenido Pereda died later. Hundreds more were injured, many by gunshot wounds. That week
Manuel Fraga Iribarne, then Home Minister and founder of the Spanish Conservative Party,
Rodolfo Martín Villa, Minister of Unions and General Campano, director of the
Civil Guard, visited some of the injured to minimize criticism. The leader of the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), cancelled a meeting with
Fraga. == Consequences ==