Basque separatist group ETA has handed over several cases of weapons and munitions as a confidence-building measure ahead of its expected disbanding, a French prosecutor said Wednesday.
Bayonne prosecutor Samuel Vuelta Simon said he had received an email tip-off that "a quantity of arms" belonging to ETA had been retrieved by police after being dropped at a location in the south of the French Basque city.
The announcement comes days before ETA is expected to announce its dissolution, definitively ending its nearly four-decade campaign of bombings and shootings for an independent Basque state in northern Spain and southwest France, seven years after it declared a permanent ceasefire.
A source close to the case said the police had found four cases "in the open air, in the city center" containing around 20 handguns, several hundred bullets for 9mm and .38-caliber revolvers and a 20-meter-long detonator cable as well as several electronic detonators.
They also found around 200 fake registration places and materials that can be used to steal cars, added the source, who requested anonymity.
ETA last year had already provided French authorities with a list of eight arms caches.
A member of a group mediating in the peace process told AFP that ETA had committed to finding those weapons "which had gone astray" and not been included on the list.
"This restitution process, which remains confidential, is ongoing," Jean-Noel Etcheverry said.
Last week ETA asked forgiveness from its victims for the "pain" caused by its campaign, a move seen as a necessary step towards reconciliation.
Created in 1959 at the height of Francisco Franco's dictatorship ETA is blamed for the deaths of at least 829 people.
International mediators are organizing a peace conference in southwest France on May 4.