Showing posts with label Catalonia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catalonia. Show all posts

Friday, September 03, 2021

Married Kremlin Spies, a Shadowy Mission to Moscow and Unrest in Catalonia

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Intelligence files suggest an aide to a top Catalan separatist sought help from Russia in the struggle to break with Spain. A fierce new protest group emerged shortly afterward.

A protest in support of the Catalan independence referendum in Barcelona, in 2017. Spain declared the vote illegal and jailed several of the politicians who called it. | Samuel Aranda for The New York Times

BARCELONA, Spain — In the spring of 2019, an emissary of Catalonia’s top separatist leader traveled to Moscow in search of a political lifeline.

The independence movement in Catalonia, the semiautonomous region in Spain’s northeast, had been largely crushed after a referendum on breaking away two years earlier. The European Union and the United States, which supported Spain’s effort to keep the country intact, had rebuffed the separatists’ pleas for support.

But in Russia, a door was opening.

In Moscow, the emissary, Josep Lluis Alay, a senior adviser to the self-exiled former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, met with current Russian officials, former intelligence officers and the well-connected grandson of a K.G.B. spymaster. The aim was to secure Russia’s help in severing Catalonia from the rest of Spain, according to a European intelligence report, which was reviewed by The New York Times.

Asked about the report’s findings, both Mr. Alay and Mr. Puigdemont confirmed the trips to Moscow, which have never been reported, but insisted they were part of regular outreach to foreign officials and journalists. Mr. Alay said any suggestion that he was seeking Russian assistance was “a fantasy story created by Madrid.”

But other confidential documents indicate that Russia was a central preoccupation between Mr. Alay and Mr. Puigdemont. For Russia, outreach to the separatists would fit President Vladimir V. Putin’s strategy of trying to sow disruption in the West by supporting divisive political movements. In Italy, secret audio recordings revealed a Russian plot to covertly finance the hard-right League party. In Britain, a Times investigation uncovered discussions among right-wing fringe figures about opening bank accounts in Moscow. And in Spain, the Russians have also offered assistance to far-right parties, according to the intelligence report. » | By Michael Schwirtz and José Bautista | Friday, September 3, 2021

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Wednesday, November 01, 2017

What Next for Catalonia? | DW English


As the stakes get higher for Catalonia and its leaders contemplate exile in Brussels, where does its independence movement go from here? Tim Sebastian meets Alfred Bosch from the pro-independence Republican Left of Catalonia party. Conflict Zone is Deutsche Welle's top political interview. Every week, our hosts Tim Sebastian and Michel Friedman are face-to-face with global decision-makers, seeking straight answers to straight questions, putting the spotlight on controversial issues and calling the powerful to account.

Monday, October 30, 2017

Madrid Stuck in the Past with Idea of Unity above All Else – Catalan MEP


Hundreds of thousands took to the streets of Barcelona, protesting the apparent desire of the Catalan government to create an independent state. Days before, hundreds of thousands had marched in support of the push for secession. An unrelenting Madrid, unwilling to let any of this happen, is ready to prevent Catalonia from becoming independent. Will it come to the use of military force? Is the drive for independence strong enough to overcome all the obstacles? We ask Josep-Maria Terricabras, member of the European Parliament for the Republican Left party of Catalonia.

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Catalonian Independence Opens 40-Year-Old Wounds


Spain is in the midst of its most serious political crisis in 40 years. As the Spanish cabinet roundly reject Catalonia's decade-long drive for independence, what is next for the divided region?

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Inside Story: What Happens Next in Catalonia?


Spain pushes back after the independence vote by firing the government and the police chief.

In less than 24 hours Catalonia has declared independence and Spain has responded by stripping the region of its autonomy and taking control of its government and police. The Spanish prime minister dismissed Catalan's leaders including Carles Puigdemont. Mariano Rajoy called for a snap election in the region on December 21. And handed over Catalonia's reins to Spain's deputy prime minister, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria. But will that simply exacerbate Catalans’ ambitions to split.

Presenter: Patty Culhane | Guests: Enric Ucelay-da Cal - Senior Professor emeritus at University of Barcelona; Daniel Gasconid - Spanish writer and political analyst; Luk Van Langenhove - senior researcher at the Institute for European Studies


Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Catalan Companies Are Leaving Catalonia and Other World Stories | DW Documentary


Catalan companies are leaving Catalonia because of uncertainty; Famine as a weapon in South Sudan; Conservative party MP's in Germany are pushing for a quota; Fears of a new refugee route to Romania.

Monday, October 09, 2017

In Spain, Opponents of Catalonia’s Secession Fear Repeat of Tyranny


The majority of Spaniards outside Catalonia are bitterly opposed to it declaring independence. Many say the claim by some Catalan nationalists that they were the only ones who suffered under Franco's 1939-75 dictatorship ignores history. Al Jazeera’s Laurence Lee reports from Jarama Valley in central Spain.

Thursday, October 05, 2017

Catalonia Villagers Report Intimidation by Far-right Activists


While much of the focus from the Catalan secession referendum has been on the region’s capital, Barcelona, there are claims in smaller villages of a campaign of intimidation by far-right activists.

People in the Catalonia countryside say cars’ tires have been slashed and windows broken since Sunday's vote.

Al Jazeera’s Laurence Lee reports from the village of Verzhas.


Sunday, October 01, 2017

Inside Story - How Will Spain Deal with Catalonia's Separatist Campaign?


'Illegal' and 'irresponsible'. Those are the words of the Spanish Deputy Prime Minister who condemned Catalonia's leaders for Sunday's controversial secession referendum. Tens of thousands of Catalans turned out to vote. That led to violent scenes in some parts of Barcelona, when Spanish national police - sent from outside the region - tried to shut down polling stations and confiscate ballots.

In Madrid, the central government said police acted with 'professionalism' and in a 'proportionate way'. So, what does the future hold for Catalonia and Spain?

Presenter: Elizabeth Puranam | Guests: Enric Martinez-Herrera - Political Analyst; Luke Stobart - Barcelona based writer


Catalonia Referendum: Local Catalan Police Clash with Guardia Civil


Sunday, September 27, 2015

Catalonia Pro-independence Parties Set to Win Majority - Exit Polls


Exit polls in regional elections in Catalonia indicate that pro-independence parties are likely to have won majority in the local parliament