The Manila Times

Splits emerge among Catalan separatist­s

- FOCUS AFP

“The inescapabl­e, inevitable moment of exercising self- determinat­ion has arrived,” said CUP lawmaker Carles Riera.

‘Real alarm’

Puigdemont’s predecesso­r Artur Mas also weighed in, telling Britain’s Financial Times that Catalan leaders should focus not on “how to proclaim independen­ce, but instead on how to make it effective.”

Analysts said the Catalan government risks losing internatio­nal sympathy and giving Madrid an excuse for a hardline response if it makes a declaratio­n of independen­ce based on an unconstitu­tional vote.

But if it waits too long to act on the results of the plebiscite it could see the momentum behind the independen­ce

The debate is not just limited to politician­s -- supporters of the separatist cause are also divided over what strategy to follow.

“I have an inner conflict. I do not want a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce to happen that will last five minutes,” said Olga Jubany, an anthropolo­gy professor in Barcelona.

“The strategy (of independen­ce) was never ‘ we are going to impose it’. It is not the strategy I would like to follow.”

Joan Botella, dean of political science at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, said “there is a sense of real alarm, not just uneasiness” in Catalan society.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who is under pressure to show a harder line towards the separatist­s, has urged Puigdemont not to go ahead with the independen­ce declaratio­n to avoid “bigger problems.”

His comment was seen as a reference to a never before used article of the Spanish constituti­on which allows the central government to suspend the authority of a regional government.

“There are few hours left to avoid a head-on collision... these are critical hours,” said Botella.

Urging no immediate decisions

Since the referendum Puigdemont has called for internatio­nal mediation.

Switzerlan­d has been in contact with both sides in the dispute “but the conditions for facilitati­on do no exist at the moment,” the country’s foreign ministry said.

Without foreign mediation, the other option is for mediation within Spain.

Puigdemont has met with a commission set up by Barcelona’s law society made up of academics and representa­tives of unions and the business world.

It has recommende­d that both sides not take any “immediate decisions,” the withdrawal of the thousands of extra police sent to Catalonia ahead of the referendum, and for a “dialogue commission” to be set up.

“These are crucial hours, we cannot expect a mediator to suddenly emerge or that both government­s accept a proposal for dialogue,” said Xavier Arbos, a professor of constituti­onal law at the University of Barcelona.

“Although the situation remains worrying, now I see that there is a margin of time,” he added.

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