The Borneo Post

Spanish minister says ‘urgent’ constituti­onal change needed

-

MADRID: An urgent reform of the Spanish constituti­on was needed, the new Minister of Regional Administra­tion Meritxell Batet said on Saturday, in allusion to a long-running political conflict between the central government and the region of Catalonia.

The Socialists hold just 84 of the 350 seats in parliament and would need a two-thirds majority to pass any constituti­onal reform, giving the conservati­ve People’s Party ( PP), who have balked at reform in the past, veto power over any bill.

“The territoria­l pact from the ‘78 constituti­on is in crisis, nobody can deny it,” Batet said in a public appearance as minister in Barcelona.

The industriou­s north- eastern region of Catalonia held an illegal referendum on its secession from Spain before making a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce in October, plunging the country in to its worst political crisis in decades.

In response, the PP took direct control of the region and the courts have since detained politician­s involved in the independen­ce drive based on the constituti­onal clause that Spain is indivisibl­e as a country.

Many Catalonia civil servants in power during the push are living in self-imposed exile to escape detention orders for charges that include rebellion and misappropr­iation of funds.

The new Socialist government took over last week after the PP’s leader and then prime minister Mariano Rajoy was ousted in a vote of no confidence.

On Friday, the Socialists lifted financial controls on Catalonia and said they would seek dialogue with the region’s administra­tion to relieve tensions over the independen­ce bid.

A constituti­onal reform is “urgent, viable and desirable” Batet said, adding she wanted to create a parliament­ary commission, originally proposed by the Socialists last year, to investigat­e how it might be done.

New Prime Minister Pablo Sanchez is likely to meet Catalonia’s hard line, pro-independen­ce leader Quim Torra before the summer, the government spokeswoma­n said on Friday. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia