The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Catalan minister: SNP is trying to do the right thing, the right way

- By Graham Keeley IN BARCELONA

The Catalan foreign minister, who was involved in the 2017 bid to break from Spain, believes the SNP is right to pursue a democratic path to another referendum.

Meritxell Serret, the foreign minister in Catalonia’s regional government, said the proindepen­dence administra­tion in Barcelona respected the strategy of the Scottish Government.

“After the decision of the British court, we want to express respect for the decisions that the Scottish Government may take and to all those who are demanding a democratic resolution,” she told The Sunday Post in an interview at the Catalan parliament in Barcelona.

“There must be a democratic way to give an answer to democratic demands and no cannot be an answer.”

The Supreme Court said on Wednesday Scotland did not have the right to hold an independen­ce poll without the approval of Westminste­r.

After the ruling, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon vowed to turn the next general election into a de facto vote on independen­ce, adding the Supreme Court ruling had dispelled the suggestion that the UK was a voluntary union.

The Catalan minister stressed there were political and historical difference­s between Scotland and Spain. In 2014, Scotland held a referendum agreed with the UK Government. In contrast, Catalonia has never held a legal referendum which was agreed with the Spanish government.

Under the 1978 Spanish constituti­on, Spain’s 17 regions do not have the right to vote on independen­ce unless there is a national referendum involving all Spain.

Despite this, Catalonia held illegal votes on splitting from Spain in 2014 and 2017. After the last vote, nine separatist leaders were jailed in 2019 for their part in the vote but were later pardoned.

Serret said support for the EU united both independen­ce movements: “Our vision is that we have always said that we are part of the European Union so we would like to demand independen­ce within the EU,” she said.

“We are both committed to achieving our demands through politics and …we and the SNP are very pro-European. From our perspectiv­e is that we want – to be part of the EU project.”

She added: “After Brexit it has been an aspect the Scottish people have realised that the European project was something that they wanted to be part of.”

In 2017, Serret was a minister in the Catalan government which staged a referendum declared illegal by the Spanish Constituti­onal Court.

Days after the referendum, the then Catalan government declared independen­ce, prompting Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

Serret went into self-imposed exile in Belgium, along with the former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, until she returned to

Spain in 2021. She faces charges of disobedien­ce and is due to stand trial next year. Looking back on the events of five years ago, when police clashed with voters on the streets of Barcelona in violent scenes which sent shockwaves around the world, Serret said both sides – Catalonia and Spain – made mistakes.

“It’s OK to say we made many mistakes. We must be responsibl­e for what we did. Both sides (should be) responsibl­e for finding a democratic solution,” she said.

Support for independen­ce in Catalonia has fallen in the past 10 years from 57% backing breaking away from Spain in 2012 to 41% in July, according to polls for the Centre for Public Opinion for the

Catalan government. Splits in the separatist movement, the cost of living crisis and the war in Ukraine have meant supporters have turned away from the cause.

The Catalan National Assembly (ANC), a separatist civil group which backs taking a hard line against the Spanish government, condemned the UK Supreme Court ruling.

Dolors Feliu, ANC president, said: “The court’s decision has denied democracy to the Scottish people, making it clear that Britain is not truly a voluntary union of nations.

“Scotland and Catalonia are striving to achieve independen­ce peacefully and democratic­ally in the face of states that do not even want to hear about it.”

 ?? ?? Catalan foreign minister Meritxell Serret speaks at a rally in Brussels in 2017
Picture Isopix/ Shuttersto­ck
Catalan foreign minister Meritxell Serret speaks at a rally in Brussels in 2017 Picture Isopix/ Shuttersto­ck

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom