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Spain’s Catalonia announces October independence vote

Spain’s Catalonia announces October independence vote
Catalonia’s regional President Carles Puigdemont poses next to a pro-independence supporter with a Catalan Estelada flag showing the date for which the regional government called for a referendum on a split from Spain, in Barcelona, on Friday. (Reuters)
Updated 09 June 2017

Spain’s Catalonia announces October independence vote

Spain’s Catalonia announces October independence vote

BARCELONA: The leader of Spain’s Catalonia region, where a separatist movement is in full swing, on Friday announced an independence referendum for Oct. 1 in defiance of Madrid.
People will be asked to vote on the question: “Do you want Catalonia to be an independent state in the form of a republic,” Carles Puigdemont said in Barcelona.
If a majority votes “yes,” the northeastern region’s pro-independence government has said it will immediately start proceedings to separate from Spain.
But the central government in Madrid is firmly against the referendum, which Puigdemont had previously announced would take place without setting a date, and which Spain’s Constitutional Court has already ruled is illegal.
As such, Catalan authorities face significant challenges to even hold a vote that would force people to break the law, particularly civil servants who will be called on to help organize the poll.
Catalonia, a wealthy, 7.5-million-strong region with its own language and customs, has long demanded greater autonomy.
For years separatist politicians in the region have vainly tried to win approval from Spain’s central government to hold a vote similar to Scotland’s 2014 independence referendum from Britain, which resulted in a “no” vote.
And while Catalans are divided on the issue, with 48.5 percent against independence and 44.3 percent in favor according to the latest regional government poll, close to three-quarters support holding a referendum.
In 2014, Catalonia held a non-binding vote under then President Artur Mas, in which more than 80 percent of those who cast a ballot chose independence, although just 2.3 million out of 6.3 million eligible voters took part.
But in holding the symbolic referendum, Mas went against Spain’s Constitutional Court, which had outlawed the vote — despite it being non-binding.
He was later put on trial and banned from holding office for two years.
Puigdemont now wants a binding referendum — even though Madrid has pledged to be just as tough this time round.
“I don’t want it, I don’t believe in it, and as long as I am prime minister, it won’t happen,” Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in May.
In February, the Constitutional Court ruled against the planned referendum and warned Catalan leaders they faced repercussions if they continued with their project.
And the central government has more drastic ways to stop the referendum.
It can ask the Constitutional Court to suspend Puigdemont for disobedience, or it could take temporary control of key Catalan functions such as the police.
In a bid to circumvent such action, the regional government has drafted a law seeking to extract Catalonia from Spain’s legal system. It is expected to present the bill in the next few weeks to the regional Parliament, where pro-independence lawmakers have an absolute majority.
But this too will likely be suspended by the Constitutional Court.
“There won’t be a referendum, even Puigdemont knows it,” said Albert Rivera, the leader of Ciudadanos, a Spain-wide party that was originally created in Catalonia to counter nationalist politicians.
He told reporters he thought the likely failure of the independence drive would precipitate regional elections, and asked Puigdemont “to put an end to this nightmare.”