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Daily Archives: 15 Novembre 2012
Recull de premsa 15 novembre 2012
Recull premsa ANC
Dijous, 15 de novembre de 2012
Ara – 14/11/2012 – 22:33h
Manifestació multitudinària contra les retallades a Barcelona
La manifestació convocada pels sindicats contra les polítiques governamentals d’austeritat ha recorregut Barcelona aquesta tarda de la jornada de vaga general. La crida dels sindicats a protestar ha aplegat “més d’un milió de persones”, segons han dit els líders sindicals en els seus discursos, i 110.000, segons la Guàrdia Urbana. Per la seva banda, la Delegació del govern central a Catalunya estima que hi havia 50.000 persones. La plaça Catalunya ha substituït, per primera vegada, la cruïlla de Diagonal amb Passeig de Gràcia com a punt de sortida per les previsions d’una afluència massiva.
Els líders dels principals partits catalans han encapçalat la manifestació, presidida per una pancarta en què es podia llegir el lema ‘Tenim solucions. Que no ens prenguin el futur’. La capçalera s’ha situat a la confluència del passeig de Gràcia amb el carrer Aragó i els organitzadors han informat que poc després de les sis la gent ja omplia tot el passeig de Gràcia “des de Diagonal fins a la Plaça Catalunya”. “Aquesta és la manifestació més nombrosa de totes les que s’han fet en vagues generals en aquest periode”, han dit els organitzadors.
El ball de xifres és semblant al de la vaga general del 29-M. En aquella ocasió, els organitzadors van xifrar la participació en 800.000 persones, mentre que la Guàrdia Urbana va calcular una assistència de 80.000 persones. Així, hi ha consens en un fet: la d’avui ha estat molt més multitudinària.
Darrere la capçalera de la manifestació hi desfila la multitud de persones que s’han congregat a Plaça Catalunya i a la part baixa del passeig de Gràcia amb pancartes contra les retallades, l’austeritat i les polítiques del govern, tant català com espanyol. Al contrari del que va marcar la vaga general del 29 de març, la reforma laboral ha cedit el pas al conjunt de polítiques del govern com a principal diana de les crítiques.
“Quan una societat està instal·lada en la pobresa, hi ha menys llibertat”
Abans de començar a caminar, Josep Maria Álvarez, líder d’UGT a Catalunya, ha valorat la vaga general positivament i ha afirmat que el seguiment ha estat massiu, sobretot a nivell industrial, però també en els serveis. “Tot i que hi havia serveis mínims, he constatat que la gent no agafava el bus ni el metro”, ha dit. Álvarez ha reclamat que es dissolguin les Corts Generals i que es convoquin eleccions o bé un referèndum per “donar veu a la gent”. “Millor que [els polítics] escoltin avui i no haguem de córrer, com estan corrent ara amb els desnonaments”, ha afegit.
Per la seva banda, el seu homòleg de CCOO, Joan Carles Gallego, ha assegurat que “quan una societat està instal·lada en la pobresa, hi ha menys llibertat i perill de fractura social. Hi ha riquesa i hi ha solucions, que les empreses paguin tots els impostos que han de pagar”.
Recorregut invers al tradicional
El recorregut de la manifestació d’avui és l’invers al tradicional d’aquestes manifestacions, ja que, després de començar a plaça Catalunya, els manifestants han recorregut el passeig de Gràcia en direcció a Collserola. D’aquesta manera, però, la manifestació es trobarà amb la marxa alternativa convocada per CGT i altres organitzacions sindicats i que sortia dels Jardinets de Gràcia en direcció a plaça Catalunya a la mateixa hora.
La manifestació ha transcorregut en un ambient festiu i hi ha una gran diversitat de gent, des de famílies amb nens petits fins a jubilitats. A l’altura de la Pedrera, al passeig de Gràcia, hi havia 14 furgonetes dels Mossos d’Esquadra controlant l’avenç de la manifestació. D’altra banda, el col·lectiu dels ‘iaioflautes’ s’ha retirat, poc abans de les 19.00 h, de la manifestació en què han participat des de l’inici.
200.000 assistents a les altres capitals
Segons els sindicats, la participació a les manifestacions d’aquesta jornada de vaga a Girona, Tarragona i Lleida ha sumat un total de 200.000 persones, de manera que a tota Catalunya el nombre d’assistents ha estat d’1.200.000 persones.
Veure notícia
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“Vull una resposta”, programa de TV d’informació sobre la independència
L’Assemblea Nacional Catalana ha començat un programa de televisió, d’emissió setmanal, amb el títol “Vull una resposta“.
Els 13 programes previstos s’emetran a tot el país a través de la Xarxa de Televisions Digitals Independents de Proximitat (XTDIP).
Clicant en aquest enllaç trobareu tots els programes
Signa un vot per la independència
Com pot Catalunya arribar a ser un estat independent?
Ecologia i estat propi
Educació i estat propi
La teoria del control i la independència
L’evolució de l’ANC
La història, un argument a favor
La immigració i el nou estat
El vot unionista i sobiranista a les eleccions del 25N
Regeneració democràtica
Joventut
Economia per a la independència
Moviment obrer
Com arribarem a la independència?
Esport català i el Barça
Federalisme?
Valoració dels resultats de les eleccions del 25N
La Unió Europea
La llengua
Les pensions
Volem que l’ANC arribi a tot el Vallès Occidental aquest 2012. Ens ajudes?
Actualment l’Assemblea Nacional Catalana és present a la gran majoria de pobles i ciutats del Vallès Occidental. Fa poc es va constituir Ripollet i ben aviat es podrà constituir Barberà del Vallès.
A Polinyà, Rellinars i Badia del Vallès també hi ha nuclis que s’estan organitzant.
Necessitem la vostra ajuda.
Ajudeu-nos a trobar persones d’aquests municipis que vulguin afegir-se a l’Assemblea Nacional Catalana. Si coneixeu interessats que hi viuen o hi treballen poseu-los encontacte amb nosaltres i facilitarem que es trobin i els ajudarem a constituir-se en teritorial.
Les persones interessades han d’escriure a aquesta adreça.
Necessitem créixer per enfortir el moviment que ha de dur Catalunya a ser un nou estat d’Europa.
Gràcies.
What the elections in Catalonia are really about
El Col·lectiu Emma ha preparat un text explicatiu en diversos idiomes sobre les eleccions del proper 25 de novembre. Pot ser útil difondre’l entre les persones d’arreu del món que s’interessin pel procés català.
La nota, original en anglès ha estat traduïda a l’àrab, alemany, castellà, català, esperanto, francès, neerlandès, indonesi, italià, portuguès i rus.
The reasons behind the November 25 election and its significance for Catalonia and beyond
Catalans are called to the polls on November 25 to choose a new regional government, but this election is not just a local event. A lot will hang on its outcome, and not only for Catalonia. Whatever Catalans decide may have far-reaching consequences for the future configuration of the Spanish state, or even its continuity. And there could also be significant ramifications for the European project.
International media have been following events in Catalonia with growing interest, especially since the pro-independence rally of last September 11. On that day 1.5 million people marched in Barcelona in a show of national dignity and civic responsibility –not a single incident was reported and not a single pane of glass was broken– and the world suddenly became aware of a conflict that is not characterized by violence or terrorism but driven by the quiet strength of an old nation.
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Independence had not always been the preferred political option in Catalonia. At the end of General Franco’s dictatorship in the mid-nineteen seventies, most Catalans were hoping they could fit in the new order that was being installed in Spain. Since then, they haven’t stopped contributing to the country’s prosperity and stability. At the same time, perhaps against their better judgment, they have spent a lot of energy looking for ways to have their national identity recognized without breaking away from the Spanish framework.
One such attempt was the proposed revision of the self-rule charter, the Estatut, a wearing process started by several Catalan political parties as far back as 2005. After Spain rejected all the essential elements of that proposal in 2010, many Catalans simply despaired about ever being able reach a sensible compromise with the state. And yet, in the summer of 2012, when the wish to part ways with Spain was already becoming widespread, the Catalan leadership chose nevertheless to try one last effort and came up with the blueprint for a new “fiscal pact”. This was meant to correct, at least to some extent, the unsustainable imbalance between Catalonia’s financial contribution to the central government and the meager resources it gets in return. Only a few days after the September 11 demonstration, Artur Mas, the head of the Catalan government, brought his plan to Madrid, where Spanish President Mariano Rajoy turned it down in no uncertain terms, leaving no room for negotiation and without even the semblance of a justification. These two events in the same week led Mr. Mas to change his approach. He decided to call an early election, giving the people a chance to ratify at the ballot box what had been so clearly expressed on the streets of Barcelona.
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Quite surprisingly in a European election these days, the central issue on November 25 won’t be the economy, although economic issues will definitely be part of the equation. Catalonia is a productive and viable society, but when it comes to managing public finances there is very little that the Catalan administration can do with the insufficient instruments at its disposal and as long as the central government retains final control over the Catalans’ tax money. Under the present fiscal arrangement, investments will only keep diminishing, infrastructures that are already strained will keep crumbling and essential services in health, education and social welfare will remain in jeopardy.
Still, these very real economic grievances should be placed in the context of a more general discontent with the evolution of Spanish political life that has been simmering for many years. Just as they have concluded that their economic viability cannot be guaranteed in the present political setup, Catalans feel they have no future as a people as long as they remain constrained by a nonperforming entity that is sapping much of their strength. What’s more, although they are sustaining Spain’s well-being with their work and their taxes, they are systematically branded as self-serving and disloyal and made to suffer constant attacks against their culture and their language in the name of superior Spanish values.
This tendency has intensified in recent times. Ever since coming to power, the present government has been striving to reimpose an impossible uniformity. Assimilation policies that were thought to be a thing of the dictatorial past are coming back with a vengeance, with government ministers and ruling-party leaders openly stating the need to “hispanicize” Catalan schoolchildren and to impress upon them the glories of Spain’s “three-thousand-year-old [sic] history”. This amounts to declaring that the collective identity of Catalans has no place in the ruling party’s monolithic design for Spain.
Catalans are simply tired of seeing that Spain hasn’t budged one bit in its denial of the country’s plurinational character and that it’s been repeatedly slamming every possible door in the face of every Catalan proposal towards its recognition. So for them it’s really about finding a way to survive as a nation even if it means starting on a path that could lead to separation from the state. This is why Mr. Mas will be seeking in this election a clear mandate to call in a very near future a referendum in which Catalans will be asked if they wish to continue as a Spanish region or to become a new state in Europe.
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The international media have been devoting a lot of attention to this issue in the last few weeks, and many foreign observers are making a serious effort to understand the Catalan point of view, to find out the reasons behind this conflict and to explain it to the world in an unprejudiced way.
Over in Madrid, however, opinion-makers in the national media keep misreading and misrepresenting the Catalan situation. After their initial bafflement in the wake of the September 11 demonstration –which proves how far removed they are from the reality on the ground– the Spanish political forces –including most of the opposition as much as the ruling party– have taken an adversarial stance. Beyond generic appeals to the responsibility of Catalan leaders, the government’s official position has been squarely to deny the Catalan people the right to express their opinion alleging that a referendum would be illegal under the Spanish constitution.
No practical suggestions have been forthcoming from other quarters, either. Very few in Spain have publicly supported the Catalans’ right to decide or denounced the government’s undemocratic attitude. Many have kept a guilty silence. Others have voiced the usual token declarations of their high regard for the Catalan people and various platitudes about the virtues of unity and solidarity, while essentially denying any merit to the Catalan position.
So, each in their own way, the government, the opposition and a good share of Spanish society are all refusing to acknowledge that there might be a point to the Catalans’ claims and thus precluding any possibility of engaging in a meaningful dialogue. And it is precisely this long-standing –and not altogether disinterested– blindness to the reality of Catalonia that could lead to its separation from Spain.
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The first leg of this contest will be played on November 25. The predictable landslide by the variegated parties that support holding a referendum on independence is likely to set in motion a process that could lead to the creation of a new state in Europe. It is to be expected that the Spanish side will do everything in its power to derail this process. Europe and the world should be watching very closely everyone’s moves, because they too have a stake in this matter. Ultimately, it is in everyone’s interest to make sure that whatever Catalans decide in a democratic, responsible and peaceful way will be respected by all. Then all would benefit from the contribution that a free Catalonia can make to the world.