Cataluña Libre?
By Peter
Koenig
October 03,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The
Referendum decided by the Government of Cataluña,
called illegal by the neoliberal Rajoy Government of
Madrid – turned into an event of abject police
violence against masses of unarmed voters. The
Referendum may have been illicit according to the
Spanish Constitution, but voting in a referendum as
an expression of opinion is a human right,
regardless of whether the central government of
Madrid would or would not accept the result of the
vote.
In the early
Monday morning hours, the Catalan Government issued
statements saying that about 2.3 million Catalans,
42.3% out 5.3 million eligible voters, casted with
90% a ‘yes’ ballot for Independence. Without the
violent interference of the national police and
civil guard, the Catalan Government estimated that
at least 80% of eligible voters would have cast
their ballot.
Clearly, the
Spanish Government’s demonstration of ruthless and
brute force was and is a reminder that in Europa
fascism is alive and well, that Generalissimo Franco
in Spain is not dead. Brussels, miserable, spineless
puppets to the transatlantic empire and the European
oligarchy, remained shamefully silent – arguing it
was a Spanish internal affair, as if Spain, a full
member of the EU wasn’t a European Union’s ‘internal
affair’.
At the end of
the day of the Referendum, 1 October,
President Rajoy had the audacity to declare
literally that there was no referendum taking place
in Cataluña. He congratulated and thanked the
Spanish police to protect law and order in Barcelona
and elsewhere in Cataluña and to uphold the Spanish
Constitution. Yet, the media showed and reported
all-day long violent police battles against peaceful
voters. The forceful, riot-clad Spanish police
smashed windows and broke into schools where voting
boots were located, attempting to prevent voter from
voting; they also removed and destroyed ballot
boxes.
At the end of
the day nearly 1,000 people – 844 officially – were
injured by national police force, extreme violence,
by utterly harmful and potentially deadly rubber
bullets and batons smashing indiscriminately into
nonviolent unarmed voters, including elderly people,
women and children. There were hundreds of thousands
of people, families who came with kids to this
historic event, some camping since Friday in the
schools to make sure that their right to vote was
protected.
Since the
Catalan police decided a hands-off policy, not to
interfere with the referendum, but rather to protect
the voters from possible violence, the fascist Rajoy
Government sent in police and the civil guard from
other parts of Spain to prevent the vote to take
place. Their brutal and excessive violence against
unarmed voters was shocking. They clearly had firm
instructions for their brutality from their masters
in Madrid – the very masters that congratulated them
for carrying out their duties. It was a horrible
sight to see.
President
Rajoy lauding the violent police that left hundreds
of inured, many seriously wounded, is yet another
testimony that fascism in Europe is growing.
Franco’s blood must be running in Rajoy’s veins.
Brussels, the headquarters of the European Police
state – of the growing European military regime –
already today engulfing the bulk of the 28 EU member
states, concurred with this violence by remaining
disgracefully silent.
Let’s look a
bit closer at some of the reasons behind this
horrendous crackdown on people who were merely
intent of expressing their opinion – a full human
right, according to the UN Charter.
Cataluña with
a population of about 7.5 million (out of Spain’s 46
million) and a surface of about 7% of Spain’s
506,000 km2 contributes about 20% to Spain’s
economic output, produces 25% of Spain’s exports,
receives 23.5% of Spain’s foreign tourist, and 57%
of foreign of Spain’s investments. There is a lot to
lose by Cataluña’s secession.
Cataluña today
receives about 1,800 euros per capita in tax
devolution from Madrid, but contributes at least
double that amount to the Spanish Treasury. This
imbalance has long been a sore thumb in the
relations between Barcelona and Madrid. But Rajoy’s
PP (Partido Popular) Government has always staunchly
refused any dialogue for more autonomy and more
financial justice.
Spain’s
northern Basque Region fought for decades
(1959-2011) for independence. The Spain-ETA armed
political conflict, also known as the Basque
National Liberation Movement, caused hundreds of
violent deaths. When they finally reached
disarmament and a peace agreement in 2011 with the
central government in Madrid, they settled for a
considerably fairer fiscal agreement with Madrid.
Looking at
history, Cataluña became part of Spain in the 15th Century
under King Felipe VI and
Queen Isabella. In the 20th Century,
under the Spanish Republic, Cataluña with her own
culture and language, received full autonomy in
1932. I was abolished by Franco, when he came to
power in 1938. After Franco’s death in 1975,
Cataluña regained temporary autonomy which lapsed in
2006, when a Spanish High Court challenged the
Statute of Autonomy and ruled some articles of the
Statute ‘unconstitutional’. That was the time when
the most recent Catalan Independence Movement began.
Since then several mock referenda took place,
including the latest in 2014, when 80% of those who
voted (about 30% of eligible voters) opted for
independence.
The 1st October
2017 Referendum was the first serious attempt at
secession since 2006. Though non-conform with the
Spanish Constitution, the forceful and violent
suppression of the people’s freedom of expression –
was a grave human right’s abuse. It will most likely
backfire – badly.
This fierce
oppression by Madrid, the unwillingness for
dialogue, has definitely turned most Catalans
against Madrid and for independence. A few weeks ago
the polls in Cataluña indicated a close call with a
slight edge for those who wanted to remain with
Spain. After threats from Madrid for weeks and the
violent police crackdown of yesterday’s election, at
least 80% of eligible Catalan voters now seek
independence. A similar trend could be found within
Spain. A couple of months ago, 10% to 20% of
Spaniards were neutral or favored independence for
Cataluña. After yesterday’s police fiasco, close to
half of Spaniards in solidarity with their Catalan
brothers support Cataluña’s independence.
The fight is
by no means over after Madrid’s violent attempted
oppression of the vote. We can just hope that civil
war can be avoided.
Peter Koenig is an
economist and geopolitical analyst. He is also a
former World Bank staff and worked extensively
around the world in the fields of environment and
water resources. He lectures at universities in the
US, Europe and South America. He writes regularly
for Global Research, ICH, RT, Sputnik, PressTV, The
4th Media (China), TeleSUR, The Vineyard of The
Saker Blog, and other internet sites. He is the
author of Implosion
– An Economic Thriller about War, Environmental
Destruction and Corporate Greed –
fiction based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank
experience around the globe. He is also a co-author
of The
World Order and Revolution! – Essays from the
Resistance.
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