Oman Daily Observer

Catalan chief pledges ‘binding’ independen­ce referendum

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MADRID: Catalonia’s separatist president said on Friday that come what may, there would be a “legal and binding referendum” for independen­ce from Spain next year despite fierce opposition from the central government.

In an end of year televised message recorded at regional government headquarte­rs in Barcelona, Carles Puigdemont said that 2017 would be a “crucial” year for the wealthy Spanish northeaste­rn region run by a proindepen­dence administra­tion.

“We Catalans will freely decide our own future through a legal and binding referendum,” he said.

Puigdemont announced in the autumn that he would call an independen­ce vote in September 2017, a move that was ratified in a resolution voted by the majority-separatist, regional parliament.

But the Constituti­onal Court later suspended the resolution pending a five-month period during which it will decide whether to ban the vote for good or lift the suspension.

In his speech, Puigdemont said the vote would “be called in accordance with the mandate of our laws”, but did not detail what he would do if the court banned the referendum.

Separatist­s in Catalonia have for years tried — in vain — to win approval from Spain’s central government for an independen­ce vote like Scotland’s 2014 referendum.

Former president Artur Mas tried to hold such a referendum, but it was banned by the Constituti­onal Court so he held a symbolic, non-binding independen­ce vote instead in November 2014.

More than 80 per cent of those who cast their ballot did so for independen­ce — although just 2.3 million people out of a total of 6.3 million eligible voters took part.

But Mas is now due to stand trial for staging the vote on charges of serious disobedien­ce and malfeasanc­e, and risks a 10-year ban on holding public office.

Puigdemont insisted that Catalonia would keep reaching out to Madrid, with whom there has been a thaw in relations since Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservati­ve government was sworn in for a second term last month.

The government has offered to negotiate a list of economic and social demands made by Puigdemont but has refused to discuss the planned independen­ce referendum — as reiterated by Rajoy on Friday.

 ?? Inset ?? Separatist­s in Catalonia have for years tried in vain to win approval from the government for an independen­ce vote like Scotland’s 2014 referendum. ( ) Catalonia’s separatist president Carles Puigdemont.
Inset Separatist­s in Catalonia have for years tried in vain to win approval from the government for an independen­ce vote like Scotland’s 2014 referendum. ( ) Catalonia’s separatist president Carles Puigdemont.

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