Thursday, September 13, 2012

A dream that is getting closer

The day before yesterday, September 11th, a huge demonstration was taken in Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia. A crowd of 1.5 million people coming from all the country gathered to wave pro-independence catalan flags and to claim independence from Spain. The demonstration was so massive that it couldn't escape from the focus of attention of the Spanish and international media. Only the Spanish ultra-right wing newspaper "ABC" treated the event as incidental. It has undoubtedly been a show of strength of the independentism in Catalonia since the restoration of democracy in 1977.

Spanish politicians and media have hurried to say the reason of the demonstration was a reaction to the social cuts Catalonia is suffering due to the Spanish economical crisis. Moreover, the same politicians and media point out that Catalonia has a big debt qualified as "junk" by Standard & Poors. However, they forget several crucial points to understand the growth of Catalan independentism:
  1. If Catalonia owes a big debt is due to the unfair fiscality Catalonia has been suffering for many years: Catalonia represents the 20% of the Spanish GDP, but it gets back less than the taxes it gives to Spain. It turns out that one of the most productive regions of Spain, open to the Mediterranean sea, and whose territory is connected to the rest of Europe has the worst infrastructures of all Spain. The most recent grotesque case is the "Mediterranean Axis", a railway that connects Europe with Africa along the Mediterranean coast. The European Union has stated that this infrastructure is essential for Europe for two reasons: number one, it connects Europe with Africa and, number two, it passes through Barcelona's port, which is becoming the most important port of the Mediterranean Sea (luxury cruises, cargo ships, ...). But Spain insists on building another railway that would pass by Madrid (at the center of Spain) and would reach Europe by making a tunnel across the Pyrenees mountains; Europe has said that it's crazy. So the money Catalonia generates is used for building useless or underexploited infrastructures around the unproductive regions of Spain, where politicians and heirs of old royalty members have lands to exploit. 
  2. Catalonia is plenty of tolled motorways. It is OK: motorways need maintenance and people that use them should pay for it. BUT, it turns out that, in Catalonia, to go from A to B you need to pay the motorway, but in Spain you can go from A to B for free: don't worry, Catalans pay it with taxes. Have you ever seen two parallel motorways going from A to B, one of them tolled and the other one free? I did, and I checked that people didn't use the tolled one (obvious). The graphics below show the difference between Catalonia and other regions of Spain (Madrid, Andalusia and Extremadura) with regard to free (in blue) versus toll motorways (in red):
  3. In 2006, Catalans voted in a LEGAL referendum (approved not only by the Catalan Parliament but also by the Spanish one) for a law called "Statute", which updated the old Statute of 1979. Catalans decided to accept the new Statute but in 2010 the Spanish Constitutional Court, built up of members belonging to political parties, rejected the law. This decision made Catalans to go on a huge demonstration in 2010. This demonstration was a mix of feelings: some wanted independence, some simply wanted respect.
  4. Due to the Statute rejection, Spain started a campaign to destroy the linguistics policy in Catalonia (approved by the European Union) and attempted to remove prominence to Catalan language in favor of Spanish. Hopefully the Catalan government has been able to stop these attacks, but the Catalan society has got them as an insult. Furthermore, Spain continuously attempts to eradicate the Catalan culture and language by telling all sorts of lies. For example, in Catalonia a child that doesn't speak Catalan is supposed to be ignored by adults when he says he's dying for a pee. Funny, isn't it? Well, after several childish lies like this, one gets fed up.
  5. Spanish military men have obsession in bombing Catalonia. We are recently being warned by a Spanish military general to not try to leave Spain; otherwise we would be swept. However we Catalans are peaceful and the past demonstration gathered 1.5 million people and no noticeable accidents happened. Our pacifism irritates some Spanish politicians because they cannot use the argument of Catalans to be violent or terrorists. Anyway, we are fed up of so many threats. We are fed up of being treated as donkeys that work for Spain and have nothing back. And we are fed up of having to be Spaniards "in the Spanish way", that is, rejecting our identity, culture and language. 

All these reasons and more are the ones that made many people to convert to independentism. Belonging to Spain is a bad deal.

Before I finish this article, I'd like to expose a funny argument used by the Spanish media to discredit the demonstration: "Catalonia has a 7 million population. Provided that 1.5 million went to the demonstration, it means that 5.5 million Catalans reject independence". According to this, all the Norwegians that didn't attend to the demonstration against the murders Anders Breivik committed are potential killers. Yes, some Spanish media and politicians suck balls.

So far there should be a lot of stuff written about the demonstration, so I finish this article with some pictures of the event.
The crowd seen from a building of Gaudí


Author: Wikimedia Commons

 Author: Albert Gea (REUTERS) 

 Author: David Ramos (GETTY) 

Author: Gustau Nacarino (REUTERS)

Author: Marcel·lí Sáenz

Author: Lluís Gené (AFP)

Author: Marte Pérez (EFE)

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