Catalonia’s Sant Pere de Torello has declared its independence from
the Spanish central government. Local deputies unanimously approved a
resolution plan on “free Catalonian territory” after Catalonia asked
Madrid for a 5-billion-euro bailout.
The resolution suggests setting up Sant Pere de Torello’s own
finance ministry, a national bank, a taxation office and justice
ministry. Once approved, the crowd of about 1,000 people gathered
outside the council exploded in thunderous applause, local media report.
Making a speech in front the public, Mayor Jordi Fabrega said the municipality is "the resistance of Catalonia" and shouted, "We refused to disappear as a people! I refuse!"
Local
separatists have appealed to the local Catalan parliament to hold a
referendum on the national sovereignty of their territory within the
next two months.
The only stumbling block for lawmakers
became the Catalonian language which, due to the law, is prohibited from
use in social and academic life. After the results of the vote on the
resolution were announced, the council proposed that the Catalonian
parliament cancel the legislation which restricts the use of their
language.
Journalist and writer Miguel-Ancho Murado says the push for independence is “symbolic” for the town, which has a population of “less than 3,000.”
The
deepening crisis and tough financial situation have added fuel to the
conflict between Catalonia and the rest of Spain, because Catalans “feel
they are not treated fairly by the Spanish tax system and also that
economic policies of the central government are not helping Catalonia to
sort out the crisis,” Murado told RT.
The move comes a week after Spain's debt-struck Catalonia region on August 28 asked Madrid for a 5-billion-euro (US$6.3-billion) bailout from “the liquidity fund,” the 18-billion-euro body set up to finance troubled regions.
If
Catalonia receives financial aid from Madrid, it will become the second
of Spain's 17 autonomous regions formally to request aid.
However, it will not accept the money if “political conditions” are put on the table, because “the money is Catalan money."
The
statement refers to the way the tax system works in Spain. The central
government collects up to 95 per cent of all taxes from the whole
country and then distributes it to different regions following the
so-called “solidarity criteria”. In Spain that means that the poorer a
region is, the more money it gets from the government. Catalonia,
considered one of Spain’s richest and most stable regions, has always
been given less money than it paid in taxes. Such a system, Catalans
believe, has led their region’s debt crisis.
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