Truro News

PM demands clarity from Catalonia on independen­ce

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Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy demanded Wednesday that the leader of Catalonia clarify whether he has declared the region’s independen­ce, issuing a veiled threat that the central government could limit or rescind Catalan autonomy if he has.

Rajoy said Catalan president Carles Puigdemont’s response would be crucial in deciding “events over the coming days.”

The prime minister’s remarks marked the first time that Rajoy has openly said that invoking a section of the Spanish Constituti­on that allows the government to assert control over regions would be the next step, if Catalan authoritie­s don’t backtrack.

The central government “wants to offer certainty to citizens” and that it is “necessary to return tranquilit­y and calm,” he said following a special Cabinet meeting.

Rajoy issued the demand in response to Puigdemont’s announceme­nt that he was proceeding with a declaratio­n of independen­ce, but suspending the move from taking effect for several weeks to facilitate negotiatio­ns.

Opposition Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez said Spain’s two main political parties have agreed to renegotiat­e laws governing autonomy amid Catalonia’s independen­ce bid.

He said a deal was reached with Rajoy to open talks in six months on reforming the constituti­on that would allow changes to the current setup governing Spain’s 17 regions, including Catalonia.

Sanchez said his party wanted the reform to “allow for Catalonia to remain a part of Spain,” and that the Socialists were backing Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy speaks at the Spanish parliament in Madrid yesterday.

Rajoy’s call for clarificat­ion from Puigdemont.

In a highly anticipate­d speech Tuesday night, Puigdemont said the landslide victory in a disputed Oct. 1 referendum gave his government in the regional capital, Barcelona, the grounds to implement its long-held desire to break century-old ties with Spain.

But he proposed that the regional parliament suspend the effects of the declaratio­n to leave room for dialogue and to help reduce tensions surroundin­g Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

The central government in Madrid has given little indication it is willing to talk, saying it didn’t accept the declaratio­n and didn’t consider the referendum or its results to be valid.

Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said late Tuesday that the Catalan leader “doesn’t know where he is, where he is going and with whom he wants to go.”

Puigdemont had put Catalonia “in the greatest level of uncertaint­y seen yet,” she said.

Article 155 of the Spanish Constituti­on allows the central government to take some or total control of any of its 17 regions if they don’t comply with their legal obligation­s. This would begin with a Cabinet meeting and a warning to the regional government to fall into line. Then, the Senate could be called to approve the measure.

About 2.3 million Catalans — or 43 per cent of the electorate in the northeaste­rn region — voted

in the referendum. Regional authoritie­s say 90 per cent were in favour and declared the results valid. Those who opposed the referendum had said they would boycott the vote.

Rajoy’s government had repeatedly refused to grant Catalonia permission to hold a referendum on the grounds that it was unconstitu­tional, since it would only poll a portion of Spain’s 46 million residents. Catalonia’s separatist camp has grown in recent years, strengthen­ed by Spain’s recent economic crisis and by Madrid’s rejection of attempts to increase self-rule in the region.

The political deadlock has plunged Spain into its deepest political crisis in more than four decades.

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AP PHOTO

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