Kuwait Times

Catalan separatist­s to hold mass rally to push for break from Spain

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Hundreds of thousands of Catalans were expected to rally yesterday to demand their region break away from Spain, as leaders of the pro-independen­ce movement try to iron out difference­s over a secession plan. Over 340,000 people have signed up to join demonstrat­ions for Barcelona and four other cities, scheduled to coincide with Catalonia’s national day, “Diada.” But the runup to the long-expected protest day has coincided with a rift between separatist parties just as they are supposed to launch steps to achieve independen­ce for the wealthy northeaste­rn region in mid-2017.

This year’s Diada is crucial, the head of the regional government of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, said on the eve of the rallies. In the coming months, “decisions will have to be taken that ensure Catalonia can freely choose its path,” he said. Catalan separatist­s have tried in vain for years to win approval from Spain’s central government to hold an independen­ce referendum like the one held in 2014 in Scotland in Britain which resulted in a “no” vote.

After winning a clear majority in Catalonia’s regional parliament for the first time ever last year, secessioni­st parties changed tactics and approved a plan to achieve independen­ce in mid-2017. But the plan ran into trouble in June when Puigdemont’s coalition government lost the support of the tiny anti-capitalist party CUP which has a hard line on independen­ce. As a result it lost its clear majority in the assembly. The pro-independen­ce camp hopes yesterday’s mass protest will reunite and breathe new life into the independen­ce drive, which is moving along more slowly than many of its supporters would like. Since 2012, major demonstrat­ions in favor of independen­ce have been held in Catalonia every year on its national day on September 11. The date marks the conquest of Barcelona by Spain’s King Philip V in 1714 after a 13-month siege and the loss of Catalan autonomy. In 2013, hundreds of thousands of Catalans draped in blue, red and yellow separatist banners held hands in a 400-kilometre human chain across the region while in 2014 and 2015 demonstrat­ors held massive rallies in Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia. The demonstrat­ion this year will be held in the southern city of Tarragona, in Berga in the centre, Salt in the north and Lleida in the east as well as Barcelona. At 17:14 (1514 GMT), protestors will hold up yellow cardboard signs to simulate the beating of giant heart. Among those scheduled to attend are separatist leaders Puigdemont, his vice president, Oriol Junqueras and also Barcelona’s popular mayor, Ada Colau, who is ambiguous about independen­ce, her far-left allies, Podemos, are the only large national party which backs a referendum but campaigns against independan­ce.

Colau criticised the “chronic immobilism” of the acting conservati­ve government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy when it comes to addressing Catalonia’s concerns. Catalans have nurtured a separate identity for centuries, but an independen­ce movement surged recently as many became disillusio­ned with limitation­s on the autonomy they gained in the late 1970s after the Francisco Franco dictatorsh­ip, which had suppressed Catalan nationalis­m.

Spain’s recent economic downturn exacerbate­d the situation, leaving many resenting the amount of taxes they pay to the central government in Madrid to subsidize poorer regions. The central government is unlikely to address these concerns any time soon. Spain has been without a fully functionin­g government following two inconclusi­ve general elections in December and June. Puigdemont faces a confidence vote in the parliament on September 28, just weeks after the planned demonstrat­ions across the region seen as a test of the unity of the separatist drive. The CUP is willing to back his government again, most likely if he agrees to call an independen­ce referendum in 2017.

 ?? —AFP ?? BARCELONA: A girl with an Estelada (pro-independen­ce Catalan flag) painted on her face smiles before a pro-independen­ce demonstrat­ion during the National Day of Catalonia ‘Diada’.
—AFP BARCELONA: A girl with an Estelada (pro-independen­ce Catalan flag) painted on her face smiles before a pro-independen­ce demonstrat­ion during the National Day of Catalonia ‘Diada’.

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