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Catalan government to call independence vote ‘this week’

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Catalonia's nationalist government said Tuesday it will "this week" call a non-binding referendum on independence from Spain on November 9, setting the stage for a showdown with Spain's central government which categorically opposes the vote.

Catalonia's regional parliament on Friday overwhelmingly approved a law which its leaders say will allow them to hold a non-binding "consultation" on independence, just one day after Scottish voters rejected independence in a referendum authorised by Britain.

Catalan president Artur Mas now must sign a decree formally calling the independence vote in the rich northeastern region which is planned for November 9.

"This will be done this week, in the coming days," Catalan government spokesman Francesc Homs told a news conference in Barcelona.

Spain's central government has branded the planned vote on independence illegal and has vowed to defend the unity of Spain.

It said it will block the ballot by appealing to the Constitutional Court as soon as Mas signs the decree.

Mas has suggested that if the central government blocks the independence vote he would call early regional elections in Catalonia which would act as a plebiscite on the issue.

But Homs rejected this scenario, saying there would be no early elections "on November 9 or after".

"The only scenario we are working on is that of a consultation and not early elections," he added.

President of the Catalonian regional government  Artur Mas  leaves the Parliament of Catalonia in Ba...
President of the Catalonian regional government, Artur Mas, leaves the Parliament of Catalonia in Barcelona on September 19, 2014
Josep Lago, AFP/File

Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Barcelona on September 11, Catalonia's national day, to demand a vote on independence.

Polls show that a majority of Catalans want the chance to have their say in a referendum, while support for independence hovers at around half the electorate.

But less than one quarter of all Catalans, 23 percent, believe the referendum should go ahead if the Constitutional Court declares it to be illegal, a Metroscopia poll published in daily newspaper El Pais on September 7 found.

The poll showed 45 percent of those surveyed believed Catalonia should respect the decision of the court while 25 percent said the region should look for other legal ways to redraw its relationship with Spain.

With an economy roughly the size of Portugal's, Catalonia -- a region of 7.5 million or 16 percent of the Spanish population -- has long been an economic powerhouse in a country where just under a quarter of people are unemployed.

But a growing number of Catalans resent the redistribution of their taxes by the central government in Madrid to other parts of Spain and believe the region would be better off on its own.

Proud of their distinct Catalan language and culture, Catalonia formally adopted the status of a "nation" in 2006 but Spain's Constitutional Court later overruled that claim.

Catalonia’s nationalist government said Tuesday it will “this week” call a non-binding referendum on independence from Spain on November 9, setting the stage for a showdown with Spain’s central government which categorically opposes the vote.

Catalonia’s regional parliament on Friday overwhelmingly approved a law which its leaders say will allow them to hold a non-binding “consultation” on independence, just one day after Scottish voters rejected independence in a referendum authorised by Britain.

Catalan president Artur Mas now must sign a decree formally calling the independence vote in the rich northeastern region which is planned for November 9.

“This will be done this week, in the coming days,” Catalan government spokesman Francesc Homs told a news conference in Barcelona.

Spain’s central government has branded the planned vote on independence illegal and has vowed to defend the unity of Spain.

It said it will block the ballot by appealing to the Constitutional Court as soon as Mas signs the decree.

Mas has suggested that if the central government blocks the independence vote he would call early regional elections in Catalonia which would act as a plebiscite on the issue.

But Homs rejected this scenario, saying there would be no early elections “on November 9 or after”.

“The only scenario we are working on is that of a consultation and not early elections,” he added.

President of the Catalonian regional government  Artur Mas  leaves the Parliament of Catalonia in Ba...

President of the Catalonian regional government, Artur Mas, leaves the Parliament of Catalonia in Barcelona on September 19, 2014
Josep Lago, AFP/File

Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Barcelona on September 11, Catalonia’s national day, to demand a vote on independence.

Polls show that a majority of Catalans want the chance to have their say in a referendum, while support for independence hovers at around half the electorate.

But less than one quarter of all Catalans, 23 percent, believe the referendum should go ahead if the Constitutional Court declares it to be illegal, a Metroscopia poll published in daily newspaper El Pais on September 7 found.

The poll showed 45 percent of those surveyed believed Catalonia should respect the decision of the court while 25 percent said the region should look for other legal ways to redraw its relationship with Spain.

With an economy roughly the size of Portugal’s, Catalonia — a region of 7.5 million or 16 percent of the Spanish population — has long been an economic powerhouse in a country where just under a quarter of people are unemployed.

But a growing number of Catalans resent the redistribution of their taxes by the central government in Madrid to other parts of Spain and believe the region would be better off on its own.

Proud of their distinct Catalan language and culture, Catalonia formally adopted the status of a “nation” in 2006 but Spain’s Constitutional Court later overruled that claim.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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