Solidarity from Scotland
Catalans receive support from British counterparts ahead of independence vote
Sympathy with Catalonia’s bid to hold an independence referendum next week is running high in Scotland, where lawmakers are increasingly vocal in condemning Spain’s actions.
In fact, a group of Scottish volunteers is already planning to fly out to help their counterparts.
Veterans from Scotland’s failed bid for independence in its own referendum in 2014 said they will travel to Barcelona next week to offer their support for a vote deemed unconstitutional by Spain.
“We back the Catalans,” said Rory Steel, vice convener of the Scottish National Party’s youth wing, who will be heading out with around 20 people.
“We’re basically going over to find out a bit more about them [the independence campaigners], trade our experiences and expertise and that sort of thing, but also to support them.”
Delegations of politicians and writers are also planning to head over for the October 1 vote as observers after a crackdown on the
team organizing the referendum and mass protests was enacted.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, head of the Scottish National Party, voiced her concern about the situation and called for dialogue in a debate in Scotland’s semi-autonomous parliament last week.
“The right of selfdetermination is an important international principle and I hope very much that it will be respected,” said Sturgeon, calling for an agreement based on the deal that led to Scotland’s own independence referendum in 2014.
‘We are Catalans’
The support is coming not only from nationalists.
An open letter to Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy calling his actions “in no way democratic” received support from more than a dozen Scottish lawmakers, including some opposed to Scottish independence.
Scotland’s referendum vote was won 55 percent to 45 percent by those who wanted to stay part of Britain.
But Sturgeon has said that Scotland, which voted overwhelmingly to stay in the European Union in last year’s referendum on EU membership, should have a right to vote again once the terms of a Brexit deal become clear. Former SNP MP George Kerevan, who founded the All Party Parliamentary Group on Catalonia, said, “The worst thing that we could do now is let that regime in Madrid crush Catalan democracy.”
“If you believe in a Scottish democracy, if you believe in a Scottish right to vote, then you have to defend Catalonia’s right to vote. We are Catalans and Catalans are Scottish,” he said.
There is a long-running affinity between Scottish and Catalan separatists.
In the Scottish referendum, a group of Catalan firefighters came to Scotland to lend their support to the independence movement in a convoy, including a vintage car painted in the colors of the Catalan flag.
Last year, Barcelona fans threatened to fly the Scotland flag at the Copa Del Rey final in Madrid after the government banned the Catalan flag, until the prohibition was overturned in court. However, the SNP
leadership kept Catalan separatists at arm’s length during their own referendum, as they sought to present Scottish independence as unique and prevent any international interference.
Precedent for Scotland?
The contrast between the Scottish and Catalan referendums could not be starker.
London permitted Scotland’s referendum to go ahead after a nationalist landslide in elections to the Scottish Parliament in 2011, and the campaign was widely regarded on both sides of the debate as a model of democratic engagement.
There were just a handful of arrests, mostly for minor disorder, such as egg throwing and online abuse.
The detention of organizers and seizure of campaign material in Catalonia have shocked Scotland.
Some in Scotland fear that if Madrid successfully suppresses the Catalan vote, it could set a precedent for London, which has refused to allow a re-run Scottish independence referendum in the near future.
Jonathon Shafi, founder of Scotland’s Radical Independence Campaign, said, “It is not beyond the realms of possibility that the British state might do the same thing years down the line if Scotland looks like it is going to move toward independence.”
“If we allow the Spanish state to set the precedent that this type of anti-democratic practice can take place, then it is a precedent that is not just set for Spain, it’s set for the United Kingdom and indeed beyond.”
“This is a question for the whole of Europe, and it’s a question for democrats everywhere.”