Yorkshire Post

Spain plays into separatist­s’ hands over Catalan poll

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CATALAN NATIONALIS­T leader Carles Puigdemont got most of what he wanted out of the chaotic pseudo-referendum on Sunday: almost 900 people injured by the Spanish police trying to block it.

No doubt that number includes a number of sprained ankles and broken nails, but the pictures will do the job.

Even the foreign media coverage bought the story that the brutal Spanish police were suppressin­g the popular will – so now Puigdemont will have an excuse for making a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce.

Puigdemont, the president of the Catalan regional government, is no stranger to histrionic­s. In the past he has compared Catalan separatist­s’ non-violent campaign for independen­ce to the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39 and even to the Vietnam War.

“Every day is a Vietnam,” Puigdemont said in a TV interview last year, which seems a bit over the top as American B-52s hardly ever bomb Barcelona. But that’s the sort of stuff that rallies the troops, and there is a minority of people in Catalonia who really want independen­ce. There always has been, because Catalonia has had a hard time from some Spanish government­s in the past.

It fought on the losing (Republican/Communist) side in the Spanish Civil War, and tens of thousands of Catalans died when General Francisco Franco’s fascists won the war. Franco punished Catalonia by banning the use of the Catalan language (which is quite close to Castilian Spanish, but different enough for people to care).

But today Catalonia is the richest region of Spain. The Catalan language enjoys equal status with Spanish and is used in the schools. The region’s wealth has attracted so many people from other parts of Spain over the years that 46 percent of the population now speaks mostly Spanish. (37 per cent use mainly Catalan, and 12 per cent say they use both equally.)

So why do so many Catalans want to break from Spain? Historical grievances dating from the Civil War and even before; resentment that so many Spanish-speakers have immigrated to Catalonia; resentment that they have to share some of their wealth with poorer parts of Spain (but this is Europe, where that is perfectly normal); and most of all what Sigmund Freud called “the narcissism of minor difference­s.”

Equally minor difference­s saw Norway break away from Sweden non-violently in 1904, and Slovakia peacefully secede from former Czechoslov­akia in 1993, so pettiness in itself is no obstacle. Catalan separatist­s, however, faced two major obstacles: an independen­ce referendum is illegal under the Spanish constituti­on – and if they did hold a proper referendum, they’d almost certainly lose.

The problem is all those Spanish-speaking people who don’t share the romantic nationalis­t dreams of many (but not all) Catalans. A poll in March showed 48.5 per cent opposing independen­ce and 44.3 per cent in favour; by July it was 49.4 per cent against independen­ce, and only 41.1 per cent for it. It’s not easy to disenfranc­hise all those “Spaniards” (most of whom were actually born in Catalonia), so a simple referendum won’t deliver the goods.

Puigdemont’s big idea probably occurred to him after a symbolic referendum in 2014 produced an 80 per cent majority for independen­ce – because it was illegal, and therefore only a third of the population (almost all Catalans) voted in it.

What if he held another illegal referendum, but this time had the Catalan parliament, where his coalition has a narrow majority, declare it “legal and binding”?

Once again, most Spanishspe­akers wouldn’t vote – but this time, he said, there will be no requiremen­t of a minimum turnout, and the regional parliament can declare independen­ce “within 48 hours” if the vote goes in favour. Or, if the Spanish government intervenes to stop the vote, as is its right under the constituti­on, he could use that as a pretext for a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce.

It was win-win for Puigdemont, and lose-lose for the Spanish government. If Madrid didn’t intervene, Catalonia would declare independen­ce on the strength of a referendum in which only a minority of the population, almost all Catalanspe­akers, voted.

If it did intervene to stop the referendum, it would be guilty of “thwarting democracy”, and the images of Catalan protesters being dragged away from polling booths would prove to the world how evil the Spanish government is.

Madrid went with the latter option, and now is seen across the world as an oppressor. Puigdemont, in a televised address Sunday evening, said: “With this day of hope and suffering, the citizens of Catalonia have won the right to an independen­t state in the form of a republic.”

He also hinted that a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce was on the way.

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