Los Angeles Times

Spaniards feel insulted by Catalans

Residents of poorer regions defend their work ethic as the northeast pushes for independen­ce.

- By Meg Bernhard

SEVILLE, Spain — Luis Zorrilla Sanchez starts most of his days at 5 a. m. and works until 9 at night, selling fruit at a small shop in this iconic southern Spanish city.

The 62- year- old has worked as a fruit vendor for more than three decades, resting only on Sundays and some holidays and during siesta, the two- hour period when stores close down so their owners can go home for lunch.

“Andalusian­s like f iesta, but they also work hard,” he said, referring to residents of Andalusia, Spain’s most populous autonomous region.

Sanchez, like other Seville residents, takes offense at the independen­ce movement in the prosperous northeaste­rn region of Catalonia, whose proponents argue that the central government takes a disproport­ionate amount of tax money from them for redistribu­tion to other parts of the country.

To that end, independis­tas use the slogan “España nos roba,” or “Spain robs us,” as a rallying point for their cause.

For some Andalusian­s, the push for Catalan independen­ce is a stinging rebuke of all Spaniards, particular­ly those who reside in less well- off regions.

“We are angry,” said Javier Martin, 55, a lecturer of business at the University of Seville. “Behind this nationalis­t feeling there is a big base of supremacis­m. They feel better than the other.”

In Andalusia, where more than 8 million people live, about 25% of residents are unemployed, according to Spain’s National Statistics Institute. Forty- two percent are at risk of poverty, according to the Andalusian Network to Fight Poverty and Social Exclusion.

Catalonia, where 7.5 million people reside, is an economic hub for Spain, accounting for 19% of the coun- try’s gross domestic product despite representi­ng 16% of the population. The region’s unemployme­nt rate is about 12.5%, lower than the national average of 16.4%.

For Juan Luis Pavon, the separatist­s’ desire to be independen­t comes from a position of privilege.

“I think in all of Europe, the regions where there are independen­ce movements are the rich regions, not the poor ones,” said the journalist and organizer of the initiative Sevilla Abierta, which advocates for social change in Seville.

The independen­ce movement has put Andalusian leaders on the defensive. In September remarks, Andalusia’s top government leader, socialist Susana Diaz , said it was “absolutely clear that Andalusia is not less than Catalonia, or the Basque Country, or Galicia,” referring to other autonomous regions with separatist strains.

Diaz voted to support efforts from the central government in Madrid to crack down on Catalan leaders seeking independen­ce.

The Spanish government called Catalonia’s secessioni­st drive illegal and ousted its top leaders Friday after the region’s parliament declared independen­ce. The government summoned the region’s Cabinet members to court Thursday for possible charges of rebellion, but ousted Catalan President Carles Puigdemont, who is in Belgium, refused to comply. Prosecutor­s asked a judge to issue an internatio­nal arrest warrant for Puigdemont and four regional ministers.

“Puigdemont is an idiot,” Zorrilla Sanchez said. “Look at him. He just left. First he’s in Brussels, and then it will be jail.”

In Seville, the capital of Andalusia, support for Spanish unity is evident. The red and and yellow national f lag is everywhere: draped over balconies, hung on equipment at constructi­on sites, inundating social media profile photos.

Over a late afternoon lunch, University of Seville tax law professor Rocio Lasarte scrolled through the messaging applicatio­n WhatsApp on her cellphone, shaking her head at how many of her contacts had changed their photos to the Spanish f lag.

Her colleague Cristina Borra, an economics professor, said she has to turn the television off at home because her husband becomes too angry when listening to the news and learning about how some independis­tas characteri­ze other Spaniards.

“All day they are critical of the rest of Spain,” she said of independis­tas. “They say we are lazy, that we never work.”

Carmen Pino, 76, was quick to defend the work ethic of Andalusian­s as she took a walk around a central Seville neighborho­od in the waning October light.

“We are workers. Fighters for our land. Businesspe­ople. We are profession­al people,” she said.

The former hospital worker, who has split her time living in Galicia and Seville, bemoaned the independen­ce movement for not understand­ing the dangers of division — Spain suffered through a civil war in the 1930s.

“This is a disaster. It’s crazy. Spain is one. It’s not independen­t pieces,” she said.

Martin, the business lecturer, contended that Catalonia’s Oct. 1 independen­ce referendum was illegitima­te because only a small part of the country — 42% of Catalans — cast a vote. He pointed to an article of Spain’s Constituti­on that reads, “National sovereignt­y belongs to the Spanish people,” and signifies to him that the whole nation has the right to decide the fate of Catalonia.

Juan Antonio Jara, 51, said he is frustrated with both sides, the independis­tas and the unionists. When he stayed at a hotel in the city of Almeria recently, he noticed Spanish f lags were draped over the f irst- f loor balconies. When he asked the hotel who had put up the f lags, a receptioni­st told him hotel employees had done so — without consulting guests — to show support for a united Spain.

“It’s a confrontat­ion of Catalan nationalis­m versus Spanish nationalis­m,” Jara said.

The issue of Catalan independen­ce is far from new. A political party advocating a separate Catalan state has existed since 1922, and over the decades, the movement has f luctuated in strength, with last month’s events bringing debate over independen­ce to a climax.

Lasarte said she was “bored” of hearing about Catalonia. Noelia Vega, 31, said there are other issues in the country that demand attention.

“Spain has a more important crisis. Health, education,” said Vega, who hails from the Canary Islands but studied in Seville. “Everyone is talking about Catalonia, but there are other problems.”

Martin also acknowledg­ed he was growing weary of conversati­on about the crisis.

He predicted the scene that would happen with his friends the following night at a soccer match between Sevilla Futbol Club and the Russian team Spartak Moskva. They would watch the game, and, in typical Andalusian fashion, go out for beers for several hours afterward. Although they would begin by talking about the match, the conversati­on would eventually turn to politics.

“We’ll forget the match,” Martin said, sighing. “And that’s not fair.”

Bernhard is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Pablo Blazquez Dominguez Getty I mages ?? FORMER MEMBERS of the Catalan government arrive at federal court in Madrid to answer possible charges of rebellion. A professor in Seville said of independis­tas: “All day they are critical of the rest of Spain.”
Pablo Blazquez Dominguez Getty I mages FORMER MEMBERS of the Catalan government arrive at federal court in Madrid to answer possible charges of rebellion. A professor in Seville said of independis­tas: “All day they are critical of the rest of Spain.”
 ?? Francisco Seco Associated Press ?? A MAN holds a Catalan independen­ce f lag in front of a policeman outside the National Court. Catalan leaders have accused Madrid of robbing their region.
Francisco Seco Associated Press A MAN holds a Catalan independen­ce f lag in front of a policeman outside the National Court. Catalan leaders have accused Madrid of robbing their region.

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