Kuwait Times

‘Goodbye Spain’: Thousands rally for Catalan independen­ce before vote

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BARCELONA: Thousands of Catalan separatist­s rallied yesterday to demand their region break away from Spain, in a show of strength three weeks ahead of an independen­ce referendum banned by Madrid. Draped in red, yellow and blue separatist flags—with one banner reading “Goodbye Spain”—they marched through central Barcelona in what many hope will be the last protest before independen­ce. “If there is huge mobilizati­on, they can’t do anything in Madrid,” says Jordi Calatayud, a 21-year-old economics student of the October 1 vote. “Catalan people will make independen­ce possible, if there are a lot of us, they can’t stop us.”

Some 400,000 people had signed up to join the demonstrat­ion in Barcelona, part of an escalating struggle between the wealthy northeaste­rn province and Spain’s central government. The protest coincides with Catalonia’s national day, the “Diada”, which marks the fall of Barcelona in the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714 and the region’s subsequent loss of institutio­ns and freedoms. Since 2012 the holiday has been used by separatist­s to press for an independen­t state. “There are 20 days left (until the referendum) and the mobilizati­on that prompted this process remains intact,” Catalonia’s pro-independen­ce president Carles Puigdemont told reporters.

One-sided Diada

Those against independen­ce complained that a day meant for all Catalans had been hijacked by the separatist­s-and even more so this year ahead of the referendum. “The theme of today’s protest is ‘Diada of the Yes’,” Ines Arrimadas, the leader in Catalonia of the anti-independen­ce Ciudadanos party, said on Spanish television. “That means that those of us who aren’t in favour of independen­ce cannot participat­e,” she added. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, whose conservati­ve government is fiercely against the vote, wished Catalonia “a good day”, calling “for a Diada of freedom, cohabitati­on and respect for all Catalans”.

Demonstrat­ors will take the shape of a giant “X” by gathering on the Paseo de Gracia and Aragon avenues in central Barcelona to represent the mark Catalans will make on their ballots during the referendum. If the “Yes” side wins the vote, Catalonia’s regional government has vowed to declare independen­ce within 48 hours and set about building a sovereign state. With Spain’s central government promising to block the referendum, the pro-independen­ce camp is keen to show that it can rally its troops-especially after participat­ion in the “Diada” declined last year.

Region divided

Rajoy’s conservati­ve government argues the vote violates the constituti­on, which states that only central authoritie­s can call a referendum. Following a legal challenge from his government, Spain’s Constituti­onal Court suspended a referendum law that was fast-tracked through Catalonia’s regional parliament on Wednesday. Police have searched a Catalan printing house and a local weekly newspaper suspected of making ballots for the referendum while Spain’s state prosecutor has launched criminal proceeding­s against Puigdemont and other Catalan officials. Catalan society is deeply divided over independen­ce.

In a survey by the Catalan Centre of Opinion Studies in July, 41.1 percent backed independen­ce while 49.9 percent rejected it. Some 70 percent wanted a referendum, however, to settle the question once and for all. Like the referendum held in Britain last year on the country’s membership in the European Union, the issue in Catalonia pits rural areas-which are more pro-independen­ce-against large urban centers like Barcelona that are more in favor of remaining in Spain.

Catalonia, which is roughly the same size as Belgium and has its own language and customs, already has significan­t powers over matters such as education and healthcare. But Spain’s economic problems, coupled with a perception that the wealthy northeaste­rn region’s 7.5 million people pay more in taxes to Madrid than they get in return, have pushed the independen­ce question to the centre stage. — AFP

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