No independence for Catalonia, says Spanish PM
"If there is a socialist government, there will be no independence in Catalonia, there will be no referendum for independence and the Spanish constitution in Catalonia will not be violated -- that will not happen," he added.
MADRID: There will be no independence for Catalonia, nor a referendum on the question if the socialists are returned to power, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told supporters Sunday.
"No is no," Sanchez told a Socialist Party meeting at Zaragoza, in the northeast region of Aragon, ahead of the April 28 legislative elections.
"If there is a socialist government, there will be no independence in Catalonia, there will be no referendum for independence and the Spanish constitution in Catalonia will not be violated -- that will not happen," he added.
Sanchez´s speech came after the socialists´ leader in Catalonia, Miquel Iceta, said in a newspaper interview that 65 percent of Catalans wanted independence and that "democracy must find a mechanism to enable it".
Iceta´s remarks, to a Basque newspaper in late March, have been heavily criticised by the rightwing opposition People´s Party and led to allegations that Sanchez is preparing a deal with Catalonia´s separatists.
Twelve Catalan leaders are on trial in Madrid over an independence referendum that was held on October 1, 2017 despite a court ban, as well as a short-lived declaration of independence that followed.
Many separatists argue that their leaders were jailed for political reasons and will not have a fair trial.
-
Ransom deadline passes: FBI confirms ‘communication blackout’ in Nancy Guthrie abduction
-
Piers Morgan finally breaks silence on kidnapping of Savannah Guthrie's mother Nancy
-
Lenore Taylor resigns as Guardian Australia editor after decade-long tenure
-
Epstein case: Ghislaine Maxwell invokes Fifth, refuses to testify before US Congress
-
Savannah Guthrie receives massive support from Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Garner after desperate plea
-
Trump nears 500 press interactions in his second term, surpassing former President Biden
-
Snow forecast warns of reduced visibility and travel risks in Ontario
-
Casey Wasserman says he ‘deeply regrets’ Ghislaine Maxwell emails after DOJ file release