Kuwait Times

Catalan separatist­s rudderless

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On Oct 1, 2017, Catalan separatist­s held an illegal and divisive referendum which saw them launching a failed attempt to break away from Spain. A year on, however, the independen­ce movement is divided and rudderless. “We risked everything for the referendum, we blindly believed them and now we see everything they promised was false,” says Adria, an angry independen­ce supporter who is protesting against the regional, separatist government led by Quim Torra.

For the past four days, this 23-year-old has camped outside the regional government headquarte­rs in Barcelona with around 20 other people to demand the republic promised a year ago. “We’ll be here until independen­ce. We’re just asking them to move towards setting up a republic, or resign and go home.”

‘Historic’ but not enough

The October referendum went ahead despite being ruled illegal by the Constituti­onal Court, and although it was marred by police violence, it was a “historic milestone”, says political analyst Josep Ramoneda. But a year on the “situation has become paralyzed,” he said. Even if it was illegal and therefore non-binding, 2.3 million people cast their ballots out of 5.5 million eligible voters, 90 percent of whom voted to break from Spain. And the images of police violence went round the world.

“The first of October was a disgrace for all of us because the image of Spain was suffering a lot,” Foreign Minister Josep Borrell said recently in New York. For Ramoneda, it was a historic moment for the independen­ce movement but also demonstrat­ed its weaknesses. “With two million people, you don’t have the necessary tools to impose yourself unilateral­ly,” he adds.

A subsequent unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce on Oct 27 was proof of that. No country recognised Catalonia and the Spanish government rapidly dissolved the Catalan parliament, deposed regional president Carles Puigdemont and called snap local elections. Puigdemont and other Catalan leaders fled to Belgium and those who remained in Spain were jailed days later, accused of rebellion. In the December polls, separatist parties once again won a majority in the regional parliament, even if only 47 percent of voters picked them in a system that over-represents rural areas which are more pro-independen­ce. With Puigdemont unable to rule Catalonia from abroad, Torra was eventually picked to replace him. He is loyal to Puigdemont and his Together for Catalonia grouping that formed a coalition with the leftwing separatist ERC.

‘Many divisions’

But strategies differ. Those loyal to Puigdemont including the CUP, a far-left separatist party which has withdrawn its support for the regional government - want to keep the conflict with Madrid alive. But ERC and some from PDeCAT, Puigdemont’s former party, advocate moderation and say the independen­ce movement doesn’t have enough support to continue on the path of unilateral­ism. A staunch nationalis­t slammed as a supremacis­t by his rivals, Torra is trying to accommodat­e both sides.

He gives heated speeches, calling for mobilizati­on and criticizin­g Madrid. But at the same time, he takes part in fledgling negotiatio­ns with Spain’s new Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who is less antagonist­ic than his conservati­ve predecesso­r Mariano Rajoy. “Under the table, there is cooperatio­n with the central government but the official discourse remains the same,” says Joan Botella, politics professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona.

“The independen­ce movement is divided into three parties and there is also a dividing line between the leaders who are outside Spain, those who are in prison, those who aren’t... When there are lots of divisions, the situation jams up and no one is able to take the initiative.” And influentia­l civil society groups which regularly mobilize hundreds of thousands of independen­ce supporters to protest, are starting to be concerned.

Today, they will protest in Barcelona to mark the anniversar­y of the referendum and to ask that “the wishes of the majority of Catalan people be put into effect”. “We’re aware of the difficulti­es but we would like to resume the path to independen­ce,” Elisenda Paluzie, head of the ANC associatio­n, told AFP. “We want to push ahead and avoid taking steps backwards.” — AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on Oct 01, 2017, Catalan president Carles Puigdemont holds a carnation in Sant Julia de Ramis during a referendum on independen­ce for Catalonia banned by Madrid. — AFP
In this file photo taken on Oct 01, 2017, Catalan president Carles Puigdemont holds a carnation in Sant Julia de Ramis during a referendum on independen­ce for Catalonia banned by Madrid. — AFP

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