Catalan President Quim Torra on a conference today urged the Catalan people to ensure a massive turnout at upcoming public
gatherings, saying large numbers on the streets will help compel the
Spanish government to grant the region a vote on self-determination.
Torra
said in Barcelona that he is ready to enter talks on Catalonia’s future
with the central government in Madrid and that he rejects violence, but
added he will only settle for “freedom” — a reference to secession.Catalonia
“is at a crossroads” in its drive for independence, Torra said in a
much-anticipated speech at Catalonia’s National Theater.
The Catalan national day, called the Diada, on Sept. 11 and the Oct. 1
commemoration of a democratic referendum on independence on the same day last
year present an “enormous challenge” for the separatist movement as it
tries to gain traction again after a series of legal setbacks, Torra
said.
“At the Diada, our success is at stake,” Torra said
as he called on people to fill the streets in a show of support for
secession, injecting new momentum into the struggle.
“Only
an agreed, binding and internationally recognized referendum on
self-determination will resolve the conflict” between Barcelona and
Madrid, he said. Nine prominent members of the government are in Spanish jails awaiting trial on charges that include
rebellion for their role in last October’s referendum that was thwarted by Spanish courts. Meanwhile, 130st Catalan President Carles Puigdemont is living in exile in Belgium
after Spain’s bid to extradite him from Germany on rebellion charges
failed.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose government came to power in June, has adopted a change in
tone on the Catalan issue, taking a less confrontational stance than the
previous conservative administration of Mariano Rajoy. But
Sanchez’s offer to broaden the Catalan region’s self-ruling powers is
spurned by the democrats, who say they won’t back down from their
demand for self-determination on their terms.
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