From the BBC:
“Spain confirms plans to
pardon Catalan separatists”
(Prime Minister Pedro Sanchéz
gave his speech in front of the Catalan, Spanish and EU flags)
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro
Sánchez has confirmed plans to pardon Catalan separatists this week. Nine
leaders were jailed for sedition over a failed independence attempt in 2017.
Another three were found guilty of disobedience but not jailed. Their pardons
will be sent to the cabinet on Tuesday. Tens of thousands of people protested
against the plans earlier this month, but the government says the move will
help calm tensions over Catalonia. The semi-autonomous region's drive for
independence almost four years ago plunged Spain into its biggest political
crisis in 40 years. Opponents, however, have accused the Spanish government of
using the plans to gain political support. "Tomorrow, guided by this
constitutional spirit of forgiveness, I will propose that the cabinet approve
the pardon," Mr Sánchez announced during a speech in Barcelona on Monday. "To
reach an agreement someone must almost always take the first step," he
said. "The Spanish government will take that step now." Opposition to
the decision has been widespread, with a recent poll for Spanish newspaper El
Mundo finding that about 61% of people were against pardoning the separatist
leaders. The country's Supreme Court has also said it opposes the decision,
although its position is not binding.
But the prime minister's decision
has also been met with anger by Catalan protesters, who believe the leaders
should never have been jailed in the first place. Separatist leader Quim Torra,
who was banned from holding public office after refusing to take down a
pro-independence symbol from a government building, had refused to join the
prime minister's announcement, describing it as an act of "propaganda".
Riot police were stationed outside Barcelona's opera house, where hundreds of
protesters calling for Catalan independence continued to demonstrate during Mr
Sánchez's visit.
^ The Spanish Government in
Madrid needs Catalonia to remain within the country and the Catalans to be
happy because Catalonia is the richest part of Spain and keeps the other regions
going. That is why I believe Madrid is now changing their tune with regards to
the separatists even as the majority of
non-Catalan Spaniards protest the pardons - Madrid needs Catalans to continue
to financially support the rest of Spain otherwise Spain will have to go back and beg the EU for more money and help and the EU won't give it to them - just as they didn't give them Covid help. ^
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