The Borneo Post

Campaigns go silent ahead of knife-edge Catalan vote

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BARCELONA: Catalonia heads into a 24-hour campaignin­g blackout yesterday on the eve of a knife- edge vote, a potential turning point in the Spanish region’s hotly disputed independen­ce crisis.

Thursday’s regional election pits leaders of the wealthy northeaste­rn region’s separatist movement against candidates who want to stay part of a unified Spain.

Voters are highly mobilised and a record turnout is expected, but with pro- and antiindepe­ndence candidates neckand-neck in opinion polls neither side is likely to win a clear majority.

The election is being closely watched across a European Union still reeling from Britain’s shock decision to leave and wary about any breakup of the eurozone’s fourth largest economy.

It has inflamed passions not just in Catalonia but across Spain, whose government took the unpreceden­ted step of stripping the region of its autonomy after its parliament declared independen­ce on Oct 27.

“This is not a normal election,” axed Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont told supporters Tuesday evening in a final, virtual rally via videolink from selfimpose­d exile in Belgium.

“What is at stake is not who gets the most votes, but whether the country or Rajoy wins” the standoff, he added.

But with their camp in disarray, secessioni­sts would likely put their independen­ce drive on hold should they win Thursday’s vote.

“Even if a pro-independen­ce government is formed it will be very cautious how it acts because it won’t want to lose the restored authority the Catalan government has,” Andrew Dowling, contempora­ry historian in Hispanic studies at Cardiff University, told AFP.

“It won’t want to see that suspended again,” he added.

The deposed government’s failed independen­ce declaratio­n saw more than 3,000 companies relocating from the region, and no country recognisin­g the new ‘republic’.

While opinion polls suggest a narrow lead for the leftist, pro-independen­ce ERC, voters could ultimately hand victory to centrist party Ciudadanos, whose charismati­c candidate Ines Arrimadas has campaigned on a fierce anti-nationalis­t ticket.

She is fighting to replace Puigdemont, who is wanted by the Spanish courts on charges of sedition, rebellion and misuse of public funds for his role in the independen­ce drive. — AFP

 ??  ?? People wave flags and hold banners demanding freedom for jailed separatist­s leaders as they watch Puigdemont speaking via video-conference from Brussels during the final campaign meeting for the upcoming Catalan regional election in Barcelona. — AFP...
People wave flags and hold banners demanding freedom for jailed separatist­s leaders as they watch Puigdemont speaking via video-conference from Brussels during the final campaign meeting for the upcoming Catalan regional election in Barcelona. — AFP...

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