Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Catalans rally for greater autonomy

More than a million people have gathered in northeastern Barcelona to demand greater regional autonomy for Catalonia and protest against a recent court ruling forbidding the prosperous region from calling itself a nation.
  
City government spokesman Manuel Campillo said police had counted 1.1 million people at a vast rally on Saturday that filled Barcelona's major Gran Via, Diagonal and Paseo de Gracia
boulevards. Rally organisers, Omnium Cultural, calculated attendance at 1.5 million, spokesman Daniel Jove said.
  
Spain's courts recently granted sweeping new powers of self-rule to the region, but on Friday its highest court ruled that the country's Constitution recognised Spain as the country's only nation, dealing a blow to efforts by Catalonia to assume that status.
  
The verdict came after four years of debate in which conservative and liberal judges locked horns over whether the charter went beyond the limits of Spain's system of granting varying degrees of self-rule to its 17 regions.
  
Catalans have their own language and are proud of a history which, until 1714, linked them to the independent Kingdom of Aragon.
  
During the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco (1939-1975) Catalans were forbidden from speaking their language and it was illegal to publish books in Catalan.
  
Jove said about 1400 Catalan organisations, including political parties, trade unions as well as cultural and business associations, had called on members to gather.
  
Sunny, hot weather enticed many people to attend the rally. Television news reports showed a huge crowd waving Catalan nationalist flags, chanting and carrying banners saying "We are a Nation".

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