The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sanchez proposes referendum on autonomy for Catalonia

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MADRID: Spain’s prime minister proposed holding a referendum in Catalonia on greater autonomy for the wealthy region but ruled out allowing a vote on independen­ce as demanded by Catalan leaders.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who since coming to power in June has attempted to defuse tensions over Catalonia’s independen­ce drive by holding talks with Catalonia’s separatist president Quim Torra, told radio Cadena Ser the dialogue should lead to ‘a vote... on the reinforcem­ent of Catalonia’s autonomy’.

“It is a referendum for autonomy, not for aut-odetermina­tion,” he added, without giving a timeline for the proposed vote.

Catalonia, which has its own distinct language, was granted autonomy under Spain’s 1978 constituti­on adopted three years after the death of longtime dictator Francisco Franco.

In 2006, a statute granting even greater powers to the northweste­rn region, boosting its financial clout, was approved by the Spanish and Catalan parliament­s. And in a referendum at the time, over 73 percent of voters in Catalonia approved it.

But in 2010 Spain’s Constituti­onal Court struck down several articles of the charter, among them attempts to place the distinctiv­e Catalan language above Spanish in the region and a clause describing the region as a ‘nation’. The ruling sparked a rise in support for independen­ce in Catalonia, which is home to some 7.5 million people and accounts for about one fifth of the Spanish economy.

“Catalonia currently has a statute which it did not vote for, so there is a political problem,” Sanchez said.

Sanchez’s minority government, which relies on the support of Catalan separatist parties to pass legislatio­n, has distanced itself from the hardline approach adopted by its conservati­ve predecesso­r against Catalonia’s separatist drive, which sparked a major political crisis.

The Catalan government pressed ahead with an independen­ce referendum on Oct 1 – even though it had been banned by the courts – and the vote was marred by police violence.

Catalonia’s regional parliament then voted to declare independen­ce on Oct 27, prompting Madrid to sack the regional government and put the region under direct rule from Madrid. The current regional president Torra was hand-picked by his predecesso­r Carles Puigdemont who is in selfimpose­d exile in Belgium to avoid being tried for rebellion in Spain. Polls show Catalans are divided on the question of independen­ce but an overwhelmi­ng majority back a referendum to settle the question.

 ??  ?? Pedro Sanchez
Pedro Sanchez
 ??  ?? Quim Torra
Quim Torra

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