The Manila Times

Rifts, recriminat­ions among Catalonia’s separatist­s

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BARCELONA: Catalonia’s secessioni­st politician­s have admitted that the region’s independen­ce declaratio­n failed and

Five days after the Catalan parliament proclaimed a breakaway from Spain, the new republic’s civil servants were working directly for the central government which imposed had initially been feared.

Catalonia’s deposed, separatist leader Carles Puigdemont had travelled to Brussels where he told independen­ce supporters to prepare for “a long stretch” and said it would be better to “slow down” the independen­ce process rather than risk unrest.

He also accepted the “challenge” of Catalan elections on December 21 as called by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to “restore normality” after he imposed temporary direct rule on the semi-autonomous region in a bid to stop secession.

‘Naiveté’

“The independen­ce movement hasn’t slowed down, it’s stopped,” retorted a Spanish government source in Barcelona, who refused to be named.

Santi Vila, who was Puigdemont’s regional business minister until last week when he resigned after the Catalan leader decided against calling snap elections—an option some felt could have eased the crisis— accused his former colleagues Tuesday of naiveté.

He said Catalonia hadn’t been ready to function as an independen­t republic.

“Where’s the control over the territory, the control of ports, airports, the management of transport?” he asked.

“We lacked the necessary political intelligen­ce,” he admitted on Catalonia’s Rac1 radio, but denied having misled independen­ce supporters.

“But it’s true that I have government colleagues who displayed a level of naivety that is surprising at their age.”

Separatist parties to stand

Vila put his name forward to lead his Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT)—also Puigdemont’s party—into the elections.

PDeCAT is part of the separatist coalition that ruled Catalonia until the regional government was axed by Madrid last Friday, along with leftist nationalis­t ERC, whose leader Oriol Junqueras was vice-president and the region’s economic czar.

After having encouraged Puigdemont to - laration of independen­ce, ERC said it would take part in the regional election.

“We’re champions of democracy, no democrat can compete with us,” Junqueras told Catalonia’s TV3 television Monday.

For its part, the small far-left CUP party, an ally of Puigdemont, asked for time Tuesday seen the limits of institutio­nal mechanisms.”

The independen­ce movement sought EU support after scenes of brutal police repression during an outlawed independen­ce referendum on October 1 and the detention suspected of sedition—in vain.

PDeCAT spokeswoma­n Marta Pascal summed up her impression of the current situation as “crikey, what happened here?”, pointing to the fact there had been no internatio­nal recognitio­n or that Catalonia’s regional police force were now following Madrid’s orders.

Over the past years, as it built up its independen­ce drive, the Catalan government had sought the help of advisors to craft a new republic and make it a reality.

One such advisory grouping was the National Transition Advisory Council, which put together a “white paper” on independen­ce.

that the success of a unilateral proclamati­on would depend on whether the new republic could effectivel­y be governed.

‘No clear script’

Sandra Leon, a political analyst who teaches at England’s York University, said that far from focusing on a new republic, Catalan separatist­s were now looking ahead to the elections.

“Everyone is going to try and elaborate a tale of what happened in a way that will be

“There was a declaratio­n of independen­ce in which many people had placed their expectatio­ns and all of a sudden, days after it happened, there is no clear script.”

Former Catalan president Jose Montilla, a Socialist and rival of the nationalis­ts, on Tuesday accused them of having lied.

They “have deceived people, they have messed with them, they sold them something they knew was a lie, wasn’t possible,” he told Catalan television.

“Why don’t they face the consequenc­es? Where are the representa­tives of the Catalan republic now?” he asked.

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