Living in Spain does give you a different perspective. The
Ukraine situation dominates TV and radio news here, as elsewhere, yet in this
country the main concern seems to be the ridiculous plebiscite held in the
Crimea: a vote where maintaining the status quo was not even an option. And why
should that be of such interest? Because in this crazy vote the Catalan
separatists see an opportunity to push their obsession: an independent
Catalonia. This sideshow serves to deflect attention from the real issues in
the world at large where Putin’s Russia seems to be challenging the west to
step up or shut up. Meanwhile, in the background Spain possesses a number of semi-autonomous
‘states’, the Basque Country amongst them, waiting on the side lines and
watching the Catalonia/Crimea story with great interest. The Spanish Prime
Minister has even felt it necessary to point out that Spain is not Russia,
which we all knew because Russians wear funny hats (don’t they?)
I am no expert on Spanish politics, but did observe the
delight with which my (sort of) son-in-law greeted the news of the Scottish
independence vote. Previously he had maintained that the Catalans, of which he
is one, did not require independence; they merely wanted to be like Scotland -
whatever that meant to him. Now that the Scots are going to get a vote on independence,
the Catalans want that too. Whichever way the Scottish vote goes, and it is, of
course, a legal vote with two contrasting choices, the Catalans and other
separatists in Spain’s loosely coupled democracy will use it to bellow their
‘nationalistic’ fires.
Catalonia is on the east side of northern Spain, bordering
the Med (e.g. the Costa Brava), and its capital is Barcelona. Here the natives
do not wear funny hats: sombreros are solely for sale to English tourists. An
independence vote is planned there for November and this is an illegal one in
the sense that, in contrast to the UK and Scotland, the democratically elected
central government have not agreed to it and therefore would not recognise a
‘yes’ result. Nor, I’m told, would the EU, including, no doubt, the UK.
By the way, as a bit of background, besides the usual
chauvinism fuelling the Catalan separatists cause (food, music, language,
history, poetry, etc) there is a rather selfish economic argument too. Catalonia,
with a large slice of industry located there, is one of the richest ‘states’ in
Spain: separatists want the largess this provides for themselves, rather than
subsidising the predominantly agrarian economy of, say, Galicia.
I expect it’s pretty obvious that I am generally against
separatism. I do not think that nationalist zeal is good for global peace, nor
that is good for the separated and it is certainly unlikely to achieve their
dreams (except those of the separatist rulers), furthermore, where does it all
end – should the rich South-East of England separate from the poorer parts?
I have a particular and personal interest in the Catalonian
situation. In Spain, we live in Aragón, just on the edge where it joins Catalonia.
And within that frontier area, we live in Matarraña which is mostly Catalan
speaking. It is just possible that we could, in some variant of the future, become
part of a “Free Catalonia”, where the local children would have to be taught in
Catalan and all official correspondence would be in that language. So, having
spent fifteen years or so trying (not too successfully) to learn Spain I would
have to start again with Catalan. Phew!