Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Scotland to have second go at bid for independen­ce

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The Scottish parliament voted on Tuesday in favour of making a formal request to the British government to hold a second independen­ce referendum, the BBC reported.

MPs voted 69 to 59 for Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon to seek a the referendum next year or in 2019.

Sturgeon’s minority government won the vote after the Scottish Green Party backed the move, which Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson described as “regrettabl­e.”

Sturgeon said the move was needed to allow Scotland to decide what path to follow in the wake of the Brexit vote, which will see the United Kingdom leave the European Union by 2019.

Prime Minister Theresa May has ruled out holding a second referendum on Scotland’s future before completing the Brexit process, and a meeting of the two resulted in neither backing down or agreeing to any compromise.

Sturgeon said her mandate for another vote was now “beyond question”. She warned it would be “democratic­ally indefensib­le and utterly unsustaina­ble” to stand in the way.

She told a debate ahead of the vote she was not seeking confrontat­ion with the UK government and only wanted “sensible discussion­s”.

“The people of Scotland should have the right to choose between Brexit - possibly a very hard Brexit - or becoming an independen­t country, able to chart our own course and create a true partnershi­p of equals across these islands,” she said.

“I hope the UK government will respect the will of this parliament. If it does so, I will enter discussion in good faith and with a willingnes­s to compromise.”

The first minister is expected to make the formal request for a section 30 later this week - after PM May formally starts the Brexit process on Wednesday by triggering Article 50. Scotland voters rejected independen­ce from the United Kingdom in 2014.

Meanwhile, the rejected Scottish Sturgeon’s request referendum.

In a statement, Downing Street said it would not engage in negotiatio­ns with Scotland because it would be “unfair to the people of Scotland to ask them to make a crucial decision without the necessary informatio­n” about the U.K.’s “future relationsh­ip with Europe,” or about “what an independen­t Scotland would look like.”

Sturgeon has argued that while the U.K. may have voted to leave the European Union last year, Scotland voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of remaining, and thus Scottish citizens deserve an independen­ce vote before the Brexit process begins.

“The people of Scotland should have the right to choose between Brexit — possibly a very hard Brexit — or becoming an independen­t country, able to chart our own course and create a true partnershi­p of equals across these islands,” Nicola Sturgeon had said on Tuesday ahead of Parliament’s vote.

British government First Minister Nicola

for an independen­ce

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