The
Pau–Canfranc railway linking
Canfranc, Spain with
Pau, France opened to traffic in 1928, connected via the
Somport Railway Tunnel which was completed in 1915, and terminating in Spain at the
Canfranc International Railway Station. The railway line was closed due to a freight-train accident on 27 March 1970. The long
Somport Road Tunnel was opened on 7 February 2003, at a cost of €160 million to Spain and €91.5 million for France. The building of the road tunnel was controversial, particularly in France, with those opposing it claiming that it would effectively destroy the natural beauty of the
Aspe Valley (
Vallée d'Aspe), preferring full reopening of the Pau-Canfranc rail line. A group of protesters permanently squatted at the abandoned railway station near Cette-Eygun, at the foot of the pass on the French side. Among them was the charismatic Eric Pététin, who had waged a protracted legal campaign against the authorities, causing delay in the tunnel's construction. By 1998 protesters were resorting to non-violent direct action, when construction was well under way. Their mascot was the rare
Pyrenean Brown Bear, allegedly still to be found in the valley, but close to extinction, and alleged further threatened by the tunnel project. The last protesters were finally evicted in October 2005, some 20 years after campaigning against the tunnel had begun. On 3 June 2003 French deputy
Jean Lassalle interrupted the
French National Assembly by singing the "love song"
Se Canto, protesting against Minister of the Interior
Nicolas Sarkozy's announcement of the moving of 23
gendarmes guarding the Somport Road Tunnel to the town of
Oloron-Sainte-Marie from neighbouring
Urdos, where Sarkozy commented that their wives had probably been "bored". Lassalle viewed this as offensive to the residents of Urdos. In October 2020, Spain and France announced to investigate the reopening of the railway tunnel, co-financed by the European Union’s
Connecting Europe Facility (CEF). ==Sports==