Catalonia's President Carles Puigdemont has ruled out dissolving the regional parliament and calling a snap election. The Spanish Senate is set to approve suspending Catalonia's autonomy on Friday.
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Catalan President Carles Puigdemont said on Thursday that he will not initiate a snap election, despite earlier reports that he would do so to defuse the ongoing standoff between Barcelona and Madrid over the region's drive for independence.
Spain's Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said after Puigdemont's speech: "The independence leaders have shown their true face, they have promised a dream but are performing tricks."
She added that the central government was ready to move to a new phase "where the law is respected."
The upper chamber Spanish Senate, which mostly supports Rajoy's hardline stance against Barcelona, is set to approve that decision on Friday.
The government has never before evoked Article 155 against any of the country's 17 autonomous regions.
Puigdemont has accused Rajoy of wanting to carry out "the worst attack on institutions and the Catalan people" since Francisco Franco, the dictator who ruled Spain from 1939 to 1975. Franco's government suppressed Catalan culture and forbade the official use of the region's language.
Madrid and Barcelona have been locked in a standoff since Catalonia held a disputed independence referendum on October 1 in which 90 percent of voters opted for secession.
Spain had declared the vote illegal and voter turnout was only 43 percent on polling day. Puigdemont nevertheless said after the vote that "the citizens of Catalonia have won the right to an independent state in the form of a republic."
More to come.
amp/kms (AP, Reuters, AFP, dpa)
Catalans, Galicians, Basques and more: Spain's many nationalities
With a strong identity of its own, Catalonia is now at the center of a tug-of-war between the central government and autonomous authorities. To differing degrees, various parts of Spain have strong national self-images.
Image: Reuters/J. Nazca
A Roman province
The Romans had several provinces with Hispania in their names on the Iberian Peninsula. Modern Spain also encompasses such wide cultural diversity that the Spanish themselves speak of Las Espanas (The Spains). The country in its present form was never united under a single ruler until after the 1702-14 War of the Spanish Succession.
Image: picture-alliance/Prisma Archivo
A nation of regions
Spanish nationalism is strong in many regions, with former kingdoms such as Aragon largely content to be recognized as part of the Spanish nation-state. Asturias has its own language, but takes pride in its role as the birthplace of the Reconquista, or the taking back of Iberia from the Moors. Spanish nationalism was evident in recent years in Madrid in response to Catalonia's referendum.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Soriano
Bloodied fingers
Catalonia has long battled for independence. Its flag, the Senyera, is very similar to that of Aragon, to which it once belonged. The design is fabled to represent four bloodied fingers of Count Wilfred the Hairy being passed over a gold shield. Catalans were fairly happy with their situation until a court struck down the region's statute of autonomy in 2006 and support for independence grew.
Image: picture-alliance/Zumapress/M. Oesterle
No great appetite
Valencianismo, or Valencian nationalism, sprang out of the Renaixenca, an early-19th-century rebirth of the Catalan language, of which Valencian is just one variant. However, nationalist sentiment is not widespread in the region, which is home to Spain's Tomatina tomato-throwing festival. The Valencian Nationalist Bloc usually gets about 4 percent of the vote for the autonomous parliament.
Image: picture-alliance/Gtresonline
Other Catalan territories
The Balearic Islands — Mallorca, Ibiza, Menorca, Formentera — all speak variants of Catalan. Though there is a greater nationalist feeling on the islands than in Valencia, it is still more subdued than in Catalonia. Meanwhile, La Franja, a strip of Catalan-speaking land in Aragon, was split by the independence referendum, though most residents do not advocate self-determination for themselves.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/P. Seeger
The Basque Country
Because of terror attacks by the ETA militant group, Basque separatists used to make the headlines far more often than Catalonia's independence movement. Separatists consider the Basque Country in France and Spain and the region of Navarre to be one nation. About a third of people want full independence, but most want more autonomy. A referendum proposed in 2008 was ruled illegal.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/R. Rivas
The Galician cause
Although it was the birthplace of the centralist dictator Francisco Franco, Galicia has the strongest tradition of separatism after Catalonia and the Basque Country. Even Spain's mainstream national parties display a streak of Galicianism in the region. Perhaps as a result, starkly nationalist parties receive a lower share of the regional vote.
The Arabic name al-Andalus originally refers to the areas of the Iberian Peninsula that were under Moorish rule for 760 years. As Christians reconquered territories, the area known as Andalusia shrank southwards. Most Andalusians voted for autonomy after Franco died in 1975, but there is little appetite for full independence.