The Jerusalem Post

Corsica’s nationalis­ts press for autonomy talks

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AJACCIO, France (Reuters) – Corsican nationalis­ts on Monday demanded the French government enter into negotiatio­ns over greater autonomy for the Mediterran­ean island after they won almost half the votes in a local election.

The nationalis­ts – split between those who seek greater autonomy and those who see full independen­ce from France as the endgame – emerged as Corsica’s main political force for the first time in French regional elections in December 2015.

In a vote on Sunday for a newly created local assembly, the Pe a Corsica (For Corsica), an alliance of the two main nationalis­t parties, won 45.36% of the ballot, putting it in a commanding position for the second round vote due to take place on Sunday.

In the wake of Catalonia’s independen­ce referendum, Corsican nationalis­ts have downplayed any ambitions for secession, saying the island lacked the demographi­c and economic clout of the Spanish region.

Corsica has a population of just 320,000 people and a tiny €8.6 billion economy.

The nationalis­ts’ less ambitious demands, and dissatisfa­ction with the central government in France, probably helped the nationalis­ts attract more votes on Sunday.

Pe a Corsica, which unites the moderately autonomist Femu a Corsica and the committed separatist Corsica Libera, has drawn up a 10-year road map during which it hopes to obtain a new status giving the island greater autonomy and pave the way for stronger economic developmen­t.

“Paris must at last open dialogue with Corsica,” said Gilles Simeoni, the outgoing president of Corsica’s Executive Council and a Femu a Corsica member. “Corsican people have their own identity and this must be recognized.”

The French government said it would not comment on the Corsican vote until after the second round.

France is a highly centralize­d state and its demands for more autonomy have often been met with irritation and a refusal to negotiate with past government­s.

But support for the nationalis­t political movement has gained support from the most active clandestin­e group, the National Front for the Liberation of Corsica, laid down its weapons in 2014 after a near fourdecade-long rebellion.

Corsica’s nationalis­ts oppose France’s political and cultural dominance over the island, the birthplace of Napoleon annexed by Paris in 1768, and their demands for independen­ce fueled years of bloodshed.

“At some point, the wishes of the Corsican people will have to be taken into account,” Jean-Guy Talamoni, the president of the Corsican Assembly and leader of the pro-independen­ce Corsica Libera movement, told France Inter radio on Monday.

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