Scotland Independence Vote Fires Up Catalonia

Scotland Independence Vote Fires Up Catalonia

The strengthening of Scotland’s independence movement is fanning fierce passions in Spain’s Catalonia region, where noisy demonstrations are planned on Thursday by Catalans who want to break away from Spain.

Catalonia’s president Artur Mas set the northeastern region at odds with Madrid when he announced plans to hold an independence “consultation” on November 9 this year — a move fiercely opposed by the Spanish government.

Now a poll published in Britain this weekend, which showed the “Yes” camp in Scotland moving slightly into the lead for the first time, has sent Catalan separatist feeling into overdrive.

The timing for the YouGov poll in The Sunday Times newspaper came at the most sensitive time of the year for Catalonia: days before its annual “Diada” national day on September 11, which falls exactly a week before Scotland’s referendum.

– V for vote –

The Diada marks what many in this northeastern region see as the day they lost their autonomy: September 11, 1714, when Barcelona fell to Spanish and French forces in the War of Succession that redrew the map of Spain.

This year the Diada opens the final straight in the dash to hold a vote on whether Catalonia should break away from Spain — a move the Spanish government has branded unconstitutional.

Proud of their distinct Catalan language and culture, many of Catalonia’s 7.5 million inhabitants feel short-changed by the national government in Madrid, which redistributes their taxes.

Catalonia accounts for a fifth of Spain’s economy but it was hit hard by the financial crisis that broke out in 2008.

Mass Diada demonstrations began at the height of Spain’s financial woes in 2012, when vast crowds swamped central Barcelona. In 2013, hundreds of thousands formed a human chain around the region.

This year, supporters of independence will mass along two central Barcelona avenues in the shape of a giant letter V for “vote”.

Organisers say more than 455,000 people have signed up so far for the demonstration, which will aim to fill the streets with red and yellow Catalan flags under the slogan: “The time is now.”

– ‘Not a nation’ –

The vote “cannot and will not take place”, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned at his last meeting with Mas in July.

Mas vowed to pass a new regional law that he says will allow him push ahead with the “consultation” anyway, but his efforts risk being thwarted by Spain’s Constitutional Court.

Unlike Scotland, whose referendum was approved by the British government, the Catalan plan faces outright resistance from national leaders.

The Catalan anti-independence movement Catalan Civil Society (SCC) insists Madrid will get its way and rejects the comparison with Scotland.

Outside the ANC’s headquarters in Barcelona, Scotland was on the minds of those queueing to buy Catalan flags and matching shirts for Thursday’s rally.

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