The Spanish
government has taken legal action to stop a November referendum in the
northeastern region. The move has angered many ordinary Catalans who believe
Madrid has meddled too much in their affairs.
Deutsche Welle, 14 Oct 2014
The Placa
George Orwell in central Barcelona is not as glamorous as its name might
suggest. Drab buildings surround the small square and on a weekday morning, its
bars and cafes are mostly deserted, as trucks drive into it to unload
merchandise. But the scene is brightened by the many flags hanging from the
windows of the apartments that look down onto it. Most of these are the
red-and-yellow striped senyera of Catalonia, but there are also several
estelada, the same flag but with a white star, representing the region's
independence movement.
"We
all have the right to vote," says Laia Badia, a student who is crossing
the square on the way to class. "We have that right and that has to be
respected."
She is
referring to a non-binding referendum on Catalan independence which was
scheduled by the regional government to be held on November 9. The Catalan
flags on show are part of the civic campaign in favor of the vote, as are
posters on walls across the city bearing the Catalan language slogan "Ara
es l'hora" -- meaning "now's the time."
But the
central government in Madrid opposes the northeastern region's referendum,
deeming it illegal. In late September, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy appealed to
the Constitutional Court to block the vote, following through on a pledge to do
so. The court immediately accepted the appeal, meaning the referendum was
automatically suspended.
Catalonia's premier caved on the referendum - for now |
The Catalan
regional government, which has led the referendum project, responded on October
14 by announcing it would not hold that vote. Instead it said it would stage an
alternative ballot, which it claimed would not violate the law. Catalan premier
Artur Mas described it as "an advance referendum" before a definitive
one that would take place in the future, possibly in the form of regional
elections.
'A heavy
blow'
Pro-independence
Catalans such as Badia are adamant that somehow they should be able to express
their opinion on November 9. They are also angry about the legal obstacles the
Spanish government has put before them.
"One
way or the other, we're going to vote," she says. "If those who are
in Madrid don't let us vote, even though it's our right to give our opinion, it
would be a really heavy blow."
The Catalan
regional government and other nationalist political groups formulated the
referendum's two questions in December. The first is: "Do you want
Catalonia to be a state?" If the answer to that is yes, a second question
follows: "Do you want that state to be independent?" According to
Mas, these questions will remain intact for the alternative referendum he is
planning.
Polls
suggest that roughly half of Catalans would answer "yes" to both
questions, although around 80 percent are in favor of being able to vote on
independence.
Conflict
over taxes and language
In recent
years, pro-independence feeling in Catalonia has been swelling and on September
11, its national day, an estimated 1.8 million people took to the streets of
Barcelona to demand the right to hold the referendum. Those who want to make
the break complain that the Spanish state takes large amounts in tax revenues
from Catalonia -- Spain's wealthiest region -- without reinvesting enough in
its infrastructure. They also say Madrid meddles in Catalan affairs, such as
stifling the use of the regional language through a new national education law.
Many Catalans oppose independence |
Many
Catalans therefore watched in envy when Scotland held its own independence
referendum in September with the blessing of the British government.
Pau
Estrada, a young computer programmer, who would vote "yes" to both of
the referendum's questions, was in favor of going ahead with the original
referendum plan, even though doing so would have defied the Constitutional
Court and the central government.
"We
have to exercise our democratic right," he said. "If the majority of
people want to [vote], then we have to do so, even though that may be seen as
civil disobedience."
Declaration
of independence
While
Catalan regional leader Mas has been under pressure from Madrid not to proceed
with the original referendum plan, pro-independence parties have lobbied for
him to follow the civil disobedience route. The central government has hinted
that if Catalonia did take such a course of action, it might consider
suspending some of the region's autonomous powers.
The Catalan
Republican Left (ERC), which supported Mas' Convergence and Union coalition as
it paved the way for the November referendum, suggested an even more radical
path after the original plan was ruled out. ERC's leader, Oriol Junqueras,
tweeted that Catalonia's pro-independence parties should form a united front in
the regional parliament "in order to make a declaration of independence
and start the constituent process for the Catalan republic."
Josep
Ramoneda, a Barcelona-based writer and broadcaster, does not see a clear
solution to the stand-off between Madrid and Catalonia. "I think it's
going to be very difficult to end the impasse," he said. However, he
believes that Mas will probably call early regional elections, using them as a
barometer of public opinion on the independence issue.
"It's
a story which for the moment probably won't have a winner and a loser,"
Ramoneda said. "Instead, the whole situation will just get more
complicated. I think we're going to see things get more and more bogged down
rather than seeing them simplified."
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