Hotbeds of separatism in modern Europe



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19/ 12/ 2007

 <http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20071219/93261437-print.html> Print version

  

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti) - The Kosovo issue has been forwarded to the UN Security 
Council. The Russian Foreign Ministry suggests that Belgrade and Pristina 
should have another chance to come to terms. A decision on Kosovo's cessation 
from Serbia will create a precedent and violate international law. 

Today, Europe is the venue of both integration and separatist processes. 
Experts have calculated that in the 21st century more than 10 new states may 
emerge in Europe. 

Basque Country is the most traditional example of European separatism. In 
Spain, about two million Basques live in three provinces of what is called 
Basque Country. It has broader powers than other Spanish regions; the living 
standards are above the average; and Basque is recognized as an official 
language. But despite this devolution deal, the advocates of secession from 
Spain (to be merged with the Basque-populated part of France) are not going to 
stop at that. 

Francisco Franco was responsible for the growth of separatism - the Basques 
were not allowed to publish books and newspapers; conduct instruction in Basque 
(native name - euskara); give children Basque names or put out their national 
flag. Euskadi Ta Askatasuna or ETA (Basque for "Basque Homeland and Freedom") 
was set up in 1959 as an anti-Franco party. Franco has long been dead and the 
Basque country has received the autonomous status, but this does not prevent 
the Basque terrorists from fighting. More than 900 people have fallen victim to 
the struggle for "independence." 

Catalonia, an autonomous province in the north-east of Spain is also a headache 
for Madrid. Having their own language and culture, the Catalans have always 
stressed their separate identity in Spain. Their province enjoys extensive 
autonomy in Spain, a constitutional monarchy. Relations with the central 
government in Madrid are being regulated by a separate charter. In 2005, the 
new version of the charter said that the Catalans are a separate nation. 
However, there are dozens of parties and public organizations in the region, 
mostly left-wing, which are advocating cessation from Spain. Their goal is to 
hold a referendum on independence until 2014. 

Another Spanish province, Valencia, received a new autonomous status in July 
2007. 

France has a long-standing experience of resisting separatism and extremism on 
its territory, above all in the Mediterranean island of Corsica. The Corsican 
national groups clashed with the French army in the middle 1970s. The Corsican 
Nationalist Union and the Movement for Self-Determination are the biggest and 
most influential among these groups. Both have combat units. In the last 25 
years, the island's status was upgraded twice - in 1982 and 1990 the local 
authorities were given increasingly broad powers in the economy, agriculture, 
energy industry, transportation, education, and culture. Several years ago, 
French parliament recognized the existence of the Corsican nation. This 
decision was later cancelled as contradicting the Constitution of the French 
Republic. 

The Breton Revolutionary Army (BRA) has operated in Bretagne, a north-western 
French province, since the early 1970s. The descendants of the Celts, who once 
came from the British Isles, do not identify themselves fully with the French, 
or consider themselves special among other French citizens. During censuses, 
many of them call themselves Bretons although put French as their native 
tongue. The BRA (apparently named by analogy with the Irish Republican Army - 
IRA) belongs to the extremist wing of the nationalist movement Emgann, which is 
fighting against the "French oppressors." 

In Italy, the separatist attitudes are strong in the industrially advanced 
northern regions. The influential League of the North has so far given up its 
demand of secession and insists on Italy becoming a federation. There are also 
people wishing to see South Tirol, which Italy received after WWI, reunited 
with Austria. 

Belgium may separate into northern Flanders (whose residents speak Dutch and 
are leaning towards the Netherlands) and southern French-speaking Wallonia. 
This confrontation between Belgium's two linguistic communities is rooted in 
the beginning of Belgium's independent history when the Walloons and the 
Flemish formed a union against the Netherlands. Having once united in the name 
of freedom, they have been trying to break apart for almost two centuries. 
Appeals for independence are growing stronger and stronger - the economically 
advanced Flanders does not want to "feed" the Walloon Region. The polls show 
that more than 60% of the Flemish and over 40% of the Walloons believe that 
Belgium may disintegrate. 

In Britain, the separatist attitudes have moved from Ulster to Scotland. The 
recent Scottish parliamentary elections were won by the supporters of the 
formation of a new independent state from the Scottish National Party (SNP). 
The head of the Scottish government Alex Salmond declared that Scotland may 
become independent within a decade. So far, only 23% of Scots support the idea 
of their independence (as compared with 30% a year ago). However, the then 
Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown (the current British Prime Minister) 
warned in the press that Britain would be threatened with "Balkanization" if 
the 300 year-long union between England and Scotland continued weakening. 

Denmark's Faeroe Islands are a semi-autonomous territory, living on the 
government's subsidies of almost $170 million a year. This fact is a restraint 
for the local separatists, although five years ago they tried to conduct a 
referendum on independence. 

Quiet Switzerland also has its own separatists. The Front for the Liberation of 
Yura has been demanding this canton's independence from the confederation for 
over 30 years. At one time, Yura inhabited by French-speaking Catholics was 
transferred to the canton of Bern with its predominantly German-speaking 
Protestant population. The Front's leaders admit that their chances of success 
are minimal. 

Vojvodina is a Serbian autonomous region located some 35 km (22 miles) away 
from Belgrade. The Alliance of Vojvodina's Magyars, whose representatives 
control almost 70% of the region's territory, demand a republican status for 
the region, a referendum on secession from Serbia and a confederation with 
Hungary. Late last March, the Association asked the European Union to send a 
mission to study the situation. Hungarians now account for more than 40% of the 
region's population. 

A similar scenario is developing in Romanian Transylvania (in 1940-1945 it 
belonged to Hungary; in 1919-1939 to Romania; and before that to 
Austria-Hungary). The percentage of Hungarians there already exceeds 45%. The 
Union for the Revival of Hungarian Transylvania, set up under Ceausescu, has 
already held referendums on territorial autonomy in three Transylvanian 
districts late last March. The local Hungarians expressed themselves for the 
maximal autonomy from Bucharest and independent relations with Budapest. 

The "anti-colonial" raids have become more frequent in Italian Sardinia, and in 
the Austrian provinces of Stiria and particularly Carinthia, mostly populated 
by the Croatians and Slovenians. The South Albanian Greeks and the residents of 
the Portuguese Azores have also become increasingly active in demanding 
autonomy. 

Background information. 

http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20071219/93261437.html

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