Spain’s king urges Catalan lawmakers to avoid ‘confrontation’

Spain’s king urges Catalan lawmakers to avoid ‘confrontation’
Spanish King Felipe VI delivers his Christmas Eve message at the Royal Palace in Madrid on Sunday. (AFP)
Updated 26 December 2017
Follow

Spain’s king urges Catalan lawmakers to avoid ‘confrontation’

Spain’s king urges Catalan lawmakers to avoid ‘confrontation’

MADRID: Spain’s King Felipe VI in a Christmas speech on Sunday urged Catalan lawmakers to respect their region’s diversity and avoid another confrontation over independence.
Felipe’s remarks came three days after separatist parties, led by ousted president Carles Puigdemont, won an absolute majority of seats in a parliamentary vote.
The wealthy northeastern region’s newly elected Parliament must “face the problems that affect all Catalans, with respect to plurality and bearing in mind their responsibility to the common good,” the monarch said.
“The road cannot lead again to confrontation and exclusion, which as we already know generate nothing but discord, uncertainty and discouragement,” he said at his Madrid residence, flanked by Spanish and EU flags.
Spain’s central government called the election after sacking Puigdemont’s Cabinet, dissolving the Catalan Parliament and stripping the region of its treasured autonomy following an independence declaration on Oct. 27.
The declaration rattled a Europe already shaken by Brexit, and inflamed passions across Spain.
It followed a banned independence referendum on Oct. 1, which saw a brutal police crackdown that focused the world’s attention on the Catalan crisis.
Two days after the referendum, Felipe made a rare televised speech, condemning the separatists’ “unacceptable disloyalty.”
On Christmas Eve, he reiterated his call for unity, though his tone was more conciliatory.
He called on the region’s leaders to help “Catalonia’s society — diverse and plural as it is — to recover its serenity, stability and mutual respect, in such a way as to ensure that ideas... do not separate families and friends from each other.”
Spain is now “a mature democracy, where any citizen can ... defend, freely and democratically, his opinions and ideas; but not impose his ideas in a standoff with the rights of others,” the king said in his fourth Christmas speech since his accession to the throne.
Supporters of Catalan unity with Spain accuse their separatist rivals of creating a gulf pitting the pro- and anti-independence camps.