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AP/Press Association Images
Independence

Catalonia will vote today on whether to break away from Spain*

*The vote is purely symbolic but the Spanish government will obviously be watching the results closely.

ONE OF SPAIN’S biggest and richest regions, Catalonia, will hold a much-disputed symbolic vote today on whether it should break away as an independent state, in defiance of the central government.

Spain’s conservative Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative government has vowed to defend the unity of the country, as it recovers from a steep economic downturn, and has mounted a series of constitutional appeals to try to block the vote.

But Catalans have pushed ahead defiantly, fired up by the independence referendum held in Scotland in September, even though Scots voted not to break away from Britain.

Rajoy says his country cannot hold an independence referendum like Scotland because, unlike Britain, it has a written constitution that forbids it.

He downplayed the significance of the poll, at a party rally yesterday in the eastern city of Caceres.

“What will take place tomorrow, we can call it whatever one wants, but it is not a referendum, not a consultation, nor anything that resembles it, I can’t even qualify it. What is certain is that it will not have any effect,” he said.

Proud of its distinct language and culture, Catalonia, a region of 7.5 million people, accounts for nearly a fifth of Spain’s economy.

Spain Catalonia Independence A pro-independence supporter releases a candle in support of voting. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Demands for greater autonomy there have been rumbling for years, but the latest bid by the region’s president Artur Mas has pushed the issue further than ever before.

Catalonia took a step towards greater autonomy in 2006 when it formally adopted a charter that assigned it the status of a “nation”.

But in 2010 Spain’s Constitutional Court overruled that nationhood claim, fuelling pro-independence passions.

Spain’s recent economic crisis has increased unemployment and hardship in the region and swelled its debts, but in 2012 Rajoy rejected Mas’s request for greater powers for Catalonia to tax and spend.

In response, Mas vowed to hold an official yet non-binding vote on independence, but the Spanish government’s legal challenges forced him to water that down.

Today’s polls will be staffed by volunteers. Some 41,000 have signed up for the job.

AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

There is no official electoral roll but the regional government says 5.4 million Catalans and resident foreigners aged 16 and over are eligible to vote.

The ballot papers will put two questions to voters: “Do you want Catalonia to be a state?” and if so, “Do you want that state to be independent?”

Ballot boxes were set up on Saturday at schools and town halls across Catalonia even though the central government has warned the regional government that it can not use public resources to stage the vote.

The Spanish government has not specified what legal consequences, if any, Catalan leaders, volunteer poll workers or voters might face today when they go to vote.

Spain’s Justice Minister Rafael Catala on Thursday said that as long as the Catalan government takes a back seat, “no one will prevent citizens from exercising their freedom of expression”.

Critics say this symbolic vote is meaningless since those who take part will be overwhelmingly in favour of independence.

But a big turnout would strengthen the hand of Mas, 58, in trying to get Rajoy to negotiate with him.

The regional government says results are expected on Monday. Mas has said he will later write to Rajoy to ask for fresh talks on a possible fiscal pact — or even an authorised referendum.

- © AFP 2014.

Read: Catalonia WILL vote on independence this Sunday, but Madrid won’t be listening>

Read: Catalonia leader vows to go ahead with independence vote in new form>

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