The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Will Corsica become next separatist flashpoint?

Birthplace of Napoleon always had ambivalent relationsh­ip to mainland

- Henry Srebrnik Guest Opinion Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

If Corsican nationalis­ts have their way, the large Frenchrule­d Mediterran­ean island of 330,000 inhabitant­s would become Europe’s next big secessioni­st tug of war, alongside Catalonia and Scotland.

On Dec. 10 the governing Pè a Corsica (For Corsica) coalition won a convincing 56.5 per cent of the votes in elections for the island’s territoria­l assembly. French President Emmanuel Macron’s party, La République En Marche (Forward), got just 12.7 per cent of the vote.

The nationalis­ts’ victory was the result of an agreement reached two years ago between the autonomist Femu a Corsica (Party of the Corsican Nation), led by Gilles Simeoni, and those seeking full independen­ce, the Corsica Libera (Free Corsica) of Jean-Guy Talamoni.

The nationalis­ts will have 41 seats, a clear majority in the island’s 63-seat parliament.

With its strong indigenous culture and language, closer to the Italians who ruled it for centuries than to the French, Corsica, the birthplace of Napoleon Bonaparte, has always had an ambivalent relationsh­ip to the mainland.

The nationalis­t alliance wants an amnesty for Corsicans jailed for pro-independen­ce violence, equal status with French for the Corsican language on the island, and a “Corsican resident” status to dissuade foreign and French investors from buying up local properties.

Other demands include more fiscal autonomy, control over the island’s education system, and a greater say in developing the impoverish­ed interior of the huge island.

This was the second victory in a row for the nationalis­ts, who first came to power in 2015, and who now seem to have consolidat­ed their hold.

Simeoni, the chairman of the Corsican executive council, told the French government that he expected “a true dialogue, so that the Corsica question is settled politicall­y in a peaceful and long-lasting manner.”

Macron now faces the dilemma of whether to loosen France’s grip on the Mediterran­ean island or to maintain centralize­d control.

The Elysée released a statement shortly after the victory, saying the manifesto put forward by Simeoni and Talamoni seemed “ambitious.”

France has always prided itself of being a centralize­d state, and Paris has cultivated a policy of silence when faced with the island’s demands.

“It’s not indifferen­ce, it’s hostility,” contended Simeoni. “There’s no room for demands like ours in the French framework.” He called the French state “silent and paralyzed.”

But there has been some state restructur­ing in France, where limited forms of devolution have created new tiers of governance.

One of France’s 18 regions, Corsica is known as a territoria­l collectivi­ty, and as such enjoys a greater degree of autonomy than the French administra­tive divisions known as department­s; its assembly can exercise limited executive powers.

Simeoni is the former lawyer for Yvan Colonna, who was convicted of the 1998 murder in Ajaccio of a government­appointed prefect, Claude Erignac.

The killing was considered the gravest act of violence in the four-decade conflict led by the Fronte di Liberazion­e Nazinale Corsu (National Liberation Front of Corsica).

Some 30 militants remain in French prisons but the extremists renounced violence in 2014.

Talamoni, the president of the Corsican assembly, believes independen­ce is the island’s destiny. “We’ve forgotten nothing about taking our country out of the night into which France has plunged us!” Talamoni told a crowd prior to the vote.

“There’s been a ‘massificat­ion’ of nationalis­m, it’s a nationalis­m that is now inclusive,” according to Thierry Dominici, a Corsica expert at the University of Bordeaux. This, he asserted, has marginaliz­ed the traditiona­l political parties.

The crowds at the nationalis­t rallies were relatively young, which has allowed their leaders to argue that they represent a wave Paris will have to reckon with.

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