Ref: Mereka (catolonia) mau merdeka dan bebas dari ikatan kekuasaan Spanyol di 
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masalahnya, adil? Untuk melihat video footage, click situs di bawah ini :

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2012/11/2012112419512707723.html

      Catalonia vote raises issue of independence  
     
      Sunday's regional poll may pave path to secession from Spain for 
northeastern region.
      Last Modified: 24 Nov 2012 20:40  

The Spanish region of Catalonia is to hold elections on Sunday that could 
determine whether it eventually breaks away from the rest of the country.

Artur Mas, the region's president, called the poll two years early after 
failing to negotiate a new financial deal with Madrid, which would have given 
officials greater autonomy over taxation.

"This decision [is] for our self determination, our freedom and, I hope, our 
own state within the free nations of Europe and the rest of the world," Mas 
said.

"This decision, and this is the great compromise, will be taken by the Catalan 
people during the next four years."

Referendum promised

With 135 parliamentary seats available in Sunday's regional elections, Mas' 
centre-right Catalan Nationalist Coalition (CiU) is ahead in the polls.

If successful, he has pledged to hold a referendum on independence, an idea 
which has gained popularity in the past few years, with the region's economy - 
accounting for more than a fifth of Spain's national income - a key factor.

Some in Catalonia feel that the weak national economy is having a negative 
effect on the northeastern region's financial stability.

The CiU has made independence from Spain a central issue and Mas' rallies have 
bristled with European Union flags, with the 56-year-old politician voicing 
optimism that an independent Catalonia would be swiftly embraced by the 
27-nation bloc.

"It will be convenient for the European Union, because from day one of 
membership Catalonia would be a net contributor," said journalist and political 
consultant Antoni Maria Pique.

"It is a good deal for the European Union. I think that in Brussels they would 
try to persuade Spain it should not block the development of the European Union 
over issues of pride and nationalism."

Nationhood

Some of Catalonia's 7.5 million people already see it as a separate nation, 
with its own language and culture.

"We sold on September 11 (Catalonia's national day) more than we had sold 
during the previous eight years," said textile shop owner Margarita Bascompte. 
"We sold a lot. An awful lot. We sold to order. And our fabric supplier 
collapsed because of so many orders. He had to manufacture a lot more to cope 
with the demand."

But not everyone in the region, which already holds a degree of autonomy under 
Spain's federal system of governance, agrees with the move for further 
independence.

Albert Rivera is a candidate for the presidency of Catalonia, representing 
Ciutadan, a Spanish nationalist party opposed to Catalan independence.

"People from the pro-independence side say that those of us who defend the 
union with Spain within the European Union give a speech of fear," he said.

"And of course we do, because we feel fear. A president that has said he will 
ignore the constitution and any legal ruling and that nobody will stop him. All 
this in a democratic country obviously will cause you fear. We want to defend 
co-existence and we will try to avoid the Catalan citizenship being divided in 
two classes. We don't want Catalonia to slip away from the rest of Spain. We 
want to build bridges, not raise fences."

EU membership

Catalonians say they contribute 16bn euros ($21bn) more to the Spanish 
exchequer than they get back, yet infrastructure spending from Madrid goes to 
poorer regions, while projects such as the Mediterranean rail corridor are left 
unfunded.

Opponents say that prosperity will fade if - as is possible - Spain were to 
veto any EU membership application by an independent Catalonia and the 
uncertainty will drive out many businesses.

A survey published by El Pais newspaper this month showed that nearly half of 
Catalans support independence, but the number falls to 37 per cent if it means 
dropping out of the EU.

Sunday's poll comes as Spain's armed Basque separatist group ETA said it was 
ready to discuss disbanding with the French and Spanish authorities if certain 
conditions were met.

The group, which last year said it had abandoned violence after a four-decade 
campaign for an independent homeland in southern France and northern Spain saw 
the loss of more than 800 lives, said one outstanding issue was the transfer of 
Basque prisoners to jails closer to home.

Al Jazeera understands that the Spanish government is unwilling to negotiate 
over preconditions for ETA's disbanding, reportedly regarding the organisation 
as seriously weakened and not in a position to negotiate.




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