Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Seychelles’s Patrick Herminie wins presidential run-off election
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,326
  • Taliban, Pakistani forces trade heavy fire along Afghanistan border
  • Has another Nakba been averted?
  • El-Sisi and Trump to chair Gaza summit in Egypt on Monday
  • Portugal beat Ireland in injury-time in World Cup qualifier
  • Oscar-winning actress Diane Keaton dies aged 79
  • Zelenskyy urges Trump to broker end to Ukraine war after Gaza deal agreed
  • At least 16 killed in blast at Tennessee explosives plant
  • Madagascar soldiers join antigovernment protesters assembled in capital
  • Activists renew calls for football ban on Israel despite Gaza ceasefire
  • ‘Another Nakba’: UN expert says Gaza recovery will take generations
  • Relief, scepticism over Gaza ceasefire at pro-Palestine rally in London
  • Biden undergoing radiation treatment for prostate cancer
  • Portugal vs Ireland 1-0: UEFA World Cup qualifier – as it happened
  • Vacherot stuns Djokovic, faces cousin Rinderknech in Shanghai Masters final
  • India vs Australia – Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025: Teams, tickets, venue
  • Global Warning: Our future in a warmer world
  • UK, US, NATO flew 12-hour patrol on Russian border amid Ukraine war
  • Bari Weiss and the Israel narrative in the US
  • North Korea shows off new intercontinental ballistic missile
  • Why Gaza still looks to the sea for true peace
  • Israeli strikes kill at least one, injure several people in south Lebanon
  • RSF drone strike kills dozens in Sudan’s war-ravaged el-Fasher
  • France lose Mbappe for Iceland after injury in Azerbaijan World Cup win

Photos: Catalan separatists rally as movement frays five years on

By Al Jazeera Published 2022-09-12 02:54 Updated 2022-09-12 03:48 Source: Al Jazeera

Some 150,000 Catalan separatists rallied in Barcelona on Sunday, trying to reignite an independence movement that is fraying as it nears the five-year anniversary of its failed breakaway bid from Spain.

For the past 10 years, the September 11 rally held on Catalonia’s main holiday has been the focal point of the wealthy northeastern region’s separatist movement.

It has drawn in several hundreds of thousands of people who want to create a new country in the western Mediterranean culminating in an October 2017 independence push, which received no international support and was quickly quashed.

But the unity between pro-independence political parties and the civil society groups that led in October 2017 is in danger of falling apart due to conflicting views on how to go forward.

The Catalan National Assembly (ANC), a civil group that organised Sunday’s march, is strongly opposed to the talks that the Catalan government is holding with Spain’s central government in Madrid.

The influential organisation says it has lost faith in political parties and is ready to move on alone towards a new attempt at breaking with Spain. That led to Catalonia’s regional president, Pere Aragonès, becoming the first Catalan president to not attend the annual march.

Dolors Feliu, ANC president, told the AP news agency that she hoped Sunday’s rally would be a wake-up call for Aragonès to stop negotiations with the central government.

Barcelona’s police estimated that about 150,000 people attended the rally. Organisers claimed several hundred thousand more.

Amid a sea of pro-independence flags, some marchers carried signs demanding Catalan authorities either make a “Declaration of Independence or resign”.

Aragonès has defended the talks with the government of Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez as vital.

He insists that he will not renounce his pledge to hold another referendum on independence but that the talks are crucial to finding solutions for the dozens of Catalans in legal trouble for their role in the 2017 breakaway bid that was ruled illegal by Spanish courts.

Coinciding with the talks, Spain’s government issued pardons last year for nine Catalan separatist leaders who had been sentenced to long prison terms for leading the 2017 bid.

Catalan separatist parties won 52 percent of the vote last year and maintained their hold on the regional parliament.

But after years of extreme tensions and protests that turned violent in 2019, many people, especially the roughly half of Catalans who want to remain a part of Spain, are relieved there is a dialogue with central authorities.

The infighting threatening Catalonia’s separatist cause comes while Scotland is seeking to hold a second referendum on independence from the UK after the “No” vote won in 2014.