Catalonia sets independence vote date

Catalonia sets independence vote date

by Joseph Anthony
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A Catalonia independence supporter holds up a Catalan Estelada flag with the date for which the regional government called for a referendum on a split from Spain, in Barcelona

Catalonia will hold a referendum on splitting from Spain on Oct. 1, the head of the region said on Friday, ratcheting up a confrontation with the central government in Madrid which says such a vote is illegal and must not take place.

Previous secessionist challenges in Catalonia โ€“ a populous and wealthy region in northeastern Spain which has its own language and Barcelona as its capital โ€“ were blocked by Spainโ€™s conservative government and the Constitutional Court.

โ€œThe question will be: โ€˜Do you want Catalonia to become an independent state in the form of a republicโ€™,โ€ Carles Puigdemont, the head of the regional government, said.

He said attempts to agree a date and the wording of the question with the Madrid government โ€“ which is vehemently opposed to allowing Catalonia to split from Spain โ€“ had failed.

โ€œWe have always made very diverse offers and all of them have been rejected without any exception,โ€ Puigdemont said.

Madrid said that it would block any attempt to hold a vote as soon as the referendum announcement was formally rubber-stamped by Catalan authorities.

โ€œThat referendum will not take place because it is illegal,โ€ government spokesman Inigo Mendez de Vigo told a news conference. โ€œThis is just another strategic step that doesnโ€™t lead anywhere.โ€

Under Article 155 of Spainโ€™s constitution, Madrid has the power to intervene in the running ofCataloniaโ€˜s regional government, forcing it to drop the vote. This could involve sending in the police or suspending the regional governmentโ€™s authority to rule.

But this is widely seen as a last resort move and many analysts believe the clash will instead culminate in months of legal wrangling and possibly regional elections in Catalonia.

The independence drive gathered strength during a recent recession, sparking mass demonstrations in favour of splitting from Spain. Some in the region say they now want to vote on their sovereignty come what may.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter if they block it, theyโ€™re not going to be able to this time because weโ€™ve had enough,โ€ said Isabel Fernandez, a retired hairdresser sitting at a cafe in Barcelona. The 65-year-old came to live in Catalonia when she was 11 from central Spain and said she would be in favour of secession.

Pro-independence campaigners staged a symbolic ballot in 2014, months after Scots voted to stay in the United Kingdom, and which was organised by volunteers to get around court restrictions following a legal block by Madrid.

Some 2 million people voted in favour of secession in that non-binding ballot, though turnout was relatively low.

A majority of people in Catalonia favour holding a referendum, according to opinion polls, although far fewer support splitting from Spain.

The last poll showed that 44.3 per cent backed a split from Spain, while 48.5 per cent want to continue with the status quo.

โ€œI believe in the right to vote โ€“ but with regards to independence, no one has ever really convinced me of the benefits,โ€ said Antonio Piera as he waited for a bus in central Barcelona.

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