Foreign Ministry mobilizes
envoys against Catalan independence
The Foreign Ministry has
embarked on a major diplomatic offensive across the globe against Catalan
pro-independence forces by ordering Spanish envoys to explain why secession is
not the answer for Catalonia or Spain.
Foreign Minister José Manuel
García-Margallo has sent out a 210-page manual to Spain’s 118 embassies and
more than 90 consulates abroad, as well as to Spanish representatives who hold
seats in 11 multilateral organizations. The handbook instructs the envoys
point-by-point how to argue against Catalan independence and explain the
reasons why the central government is against allowing next year’s referendum
to take place.
“When a political cause is
unilaterally proposed and followed by the end of co-existence, it is improper
to refer to it as a democratic principle,” reads part of the book entitled Por
la convivencia democrática (In favor of democratic co-existence). The manual
was inspired by British Prime Minister David Cameron’s “Stronger Together”
campaign, designed to explain his government’s views on next year’s Scottish
referendum.
“Never since the recovery of
freedoms has Catalan society undergone episodes of anguish, social
fragmentation and risk of confrontation as it is experiencing now,” it reads.
“The drive for independence has caused confusion and dismay in Spanish society,
including a large part of the Catalan people.”
“The separatists are trying
to portray Spain as a colonial power”
The thesis of the internal
document, which is filled with quotes by Catalan writers as well as observers
from Spain and abroad, focuses on the argument that independence is not a
democratic option, but would instead break the framework of co-existence and
harmony built during the Transition.
In answer to the insistence
of regional premier Artur Mas on holding the referendum and his refusal to
reach a compromise, the ministry states that Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s
invitation to dialogue “has no expiry date.”
Mas, his governing Catalan
CiU nationalist bloc and other pro-independence parties announced earlier this
month a November 9 referendum date. Rajoy, who has called the vote illegal, has
said he will “guarantee” that it will not be held.
Going over pro-independence
movement arguments in favor of secession, the ministry covers the case against
an independent Catalonia step by step.
“It can be said with all
historic exactitude that Catalonia has never, in its history of democracy,
reached a greater degree of self-government in all areas, including its
politics, economy and culture, as it accomplished on the day in which, by
virtue of the Constitution and Estatut, the institutions of self-government
were returned to Catalonia,” the manual reads.
The Constitution — which the
Rajoy government argues does not allow any region to secede from Spain — was
approved by 91.9 percent of Catalans in 1978 in a region where there was 68
percent voter turnout. “Never have the people of Catalonia surpassed that level
of voter participation.”
As for international law, the
ministry argues that self-determination is permitted in former colonies,
communities where citizens are oppressed or regions where there are blatant
human rights violations. “In view of these requisites, the separatists are
trying to portray Spain as a colonial and totalitarian power that only holds
some of its citizens prisoners through force,” the manual states
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