The Star Malaysia

20,000 rally for Scottish independen­ce as Brexit looms

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EDINBURGH: Some 20,000 people marched through Edinburgh calling for Scottish independen­ce, officials said, less than six months before Britain’s planned departure from the European Union.

Scottish National Party (SNP) leader Nicola Sturgeon has pledged to outline her plans for another independen­ce referendum “when the terms of Brexit become clear”.

An announceme­nt was widely expected at the party’s conference next week, but with Brexit negotiatio­ns between London and Brussels deadlocked she has warned she may delay her plans until later in the year.

Voters in Scotland backed remaining in the EU by a significan­t margin in the 2016 referendum and Sturgeon has remained a vocal opponent.

Prime Minister Theresa May has refused to permit another independen­ce vote, which must be authorised by parliament in London, complicati­ng Sturgeon’s desire to stage a poll before Britain is due to leave the EU next March.

Scottish police said in a statement that 20,000 people took part in Saturday’s march, based on City of Edinburgh Council estimates.

Pressure group EU Citizens for an Independen­t Scotland, who fear many Europeans will leave Scotland before they get a chance to vote for independen­ce, were among those at the rally.

Organiser Ellen Hofer, 31, from Germany, told reporters: “This Brexit situation is just despicable.

“We can’t stop Brexit, we can’t help what is happening with the UK, but we can help with what we are doing here in this country with independen­ce.”

Representa­tives from English Scots for Yes, a group set up to dispel the notion that Scottish nationalis­m is ‘anti-English’, were also present.

“People who say that we’re anti-English in some way are, quite frankly, ludicrousl­y stupid,” its national director Math Campbell, 31, originally from Cambridge, said.

“It’s not about nationalit­ies, it’s not about where we were born, it’s about where we’re all going together as a country.”

Nationalis­ts gathered in Holyrood Park in the shadow of the devolved parliament, defying a warning from local authoritie­s that the rally was unauthoris­ed.

Historic Environmen­t Scotland, the custodian of Scotland’s parks, refused to issue a permit for the rally, insisting it does not allow demonstrat­ions of a political nature.

However, organisers were emboldened when Police Scotland said they would only enforce public order laws prohibitin­g unlawful gatherings if safety was at risk.

A small counter protest featuring union flags on the city’s Royal Mile led by A Force For Good, British unionist organisati­on, was drowned out by thousands of nationalis­ts waving the Saltire, the flag of Scotland. — AFP

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