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ref:topbtw-1282.html/ 12 Giugno 2018/A



Spagna

E poi i paesi Baschi ? Per ora si stringono la mano..
Spain’s Basques form 200km human chain calling for independence vote

Redazione

Niente da fare..
A Madrid le orecchie sembrano sempre ancora ben tappate..

Eppure le domande di una maggiore autonomia federalista sono sempre più importanti e significative..

Insomma la Costituzione franchista dovrà essere modificata.. meglio prima che poi..

La catena umana di oltre 200 km e di oltre 175mila persone ( la notizia che nessun media di disinforazione italiano ha riportata ) è stato un segnale chiaro e forte al nuovo governo..

Nei prossimi mesi la Spagna dovrà iniziare, seriamente, a cambiare qualche articolo della sua Costituzione..

Il tempo dei cambiamenti avanza e la Storia deve essere ancora scritta..


Tens of thousands of people from Spain’s autonomous Basque Country have joined hands to form a 202- kilometer human chain.

The gesture comes as locals push for the right to hold an independence referendum.

More than 175,000 people in Spain’s Basque Country joined to form a 202 kilometer-long human chain on Sunday, as they called for the right to host a referendum on independence form Madrid.

The chain extended from the city of San Sebastian all the way to the Basque parliament in Vitoria-Gasteiz, the capital of the autonomous region.

The protest was organized by the Basque group Gure Esku Dago (In Our Own Hands).

The Basque Country enjoys higher levels of self-determination than any of Spain’s other sixteen regions, with its own police force, education system, language and special financial arrangement with Madrid.

While polls suggest that a vast majority of Basque people do not support full independence (only around 15 percent back total secession from Madrid), many nevertheless believe that the people should have the right to vote on the issue.

Spanish laws block secessionist push.

However, the Spanish government and the constitutional court maintain that any regional plebiscite on independence is illegal.

The Spanish Constitution, created in 1978 following the end of General Francisco Franco’s dictatorship, states that the country is indivisible, referring to the “indissoluble unity of the Spanish Nation.”

Last year’s attempts by the Catalan government to hold an independence vote were met with a brutal crackdown by Spanish security forces.
Catalonia’s subsequent declaration of independence prompted Madrid to take temporary control of the regional parliament and detain dissident civil servants who took part in the vote.

Spain’s former conservative prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, was widely criticized for his handling of the Catalan crisis.

He was replaced by Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez after a no confidence vote on June 1 — a move backed by the autonomous Basque and Catalan governments.

Since taking power, Sanchez has indicated that he favors a more federal approach and that he would be willing to amend the constitution to grant the autonomous regions greater self-determination.

However, he was stopped short of advocating for Catalonia or the Basque Country’s right to full secession.


( Gagrule )


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