Panicked Brussels issue Catalonia shock ULTIMATUM: ‘If you quit Spain, you quit EU!’
CATALONIA risks “abandoning the European Union” by splitting form Spain, a panicked Brussels warned today.
The Express,
5
October, 2017
The
EU is scrambling to avoid a Catalexit, which would see the bloc
disintegrate further after an already-chaotic 18 months.
More
than two million Catalan voters braved police brutality, which left
800 injured, to choose independence for Catalonia in Sunday’s
disputed referendum, according to Catalan authorities.
But
the EU, as well as Spain’s central government, has condemned the
vote as illegal and unconstitutional and are refusing to acknowledge
the result.
In
a last-ditch attempt to bring Catalonia back under control European
Union officials have warned quitting Spain would also mean quitting
the bloc.
And
major parties in the European Parliament are also going out of their
way to make their own Project Fear warnings.
Today
a spokesman for the European People’s Party, the largest party in
the European Parliament, said Catalonia needed to acknowledge the
“truth”.
He
said: “Someone needs to tell the Catalan people the truth. If you
contest the law to abandon Spain you also need to know that you
abandon the EU.”
A
spokeswoman for the Socialists and Democrats Party said the Spanish
constitution needed to be recognised and respected.
She
said: “The European Parliament as representative of all European
people is calling all parties to sit down and work together for a
peaceful and responsible solution, in the framework of the Spanish
constitution.”
It
is just the latest warning issued by europhiles in a bid to first
block, and then ignore the referendum.
Last
week the vote was slated by the Council of Europe (CoE), an
organisation which promotes human rights, European culture and law,
and democracy across the continent. It is a separate body to the EU.
The
Venice Commission, the CoE’s consultative body, said the vote “does
not meet” the commission’s standards for a fair referendum, as it
is not recognised by the Spanish Government or its constitution.
The
Venice Commission’s secretary general Thomas Markert did make the
point of referencing the 2014 Scottish referendum, highlighting it as
an example of a fair, legally-approved vote as it gained the support
of the UK government.
And
today the EU executive called for the Spanish Government and Catalan
authorities to open dialogue to defuse the sometimes violent
confrontation over calls for Catalonia's independence.
European
Commission's First Vice President Frans Timmermans said: “It’s
time to talk”.
But
he warned: “The constitutions of all our member states must be
respected.”
But
concerns are growing for the EU as Spanish Prime Minister Mariano
Rajoy struggles to secure support from across the political divide in
his battle to stop Catalonia breaking away.
The
lack of consensus could compound Spain's worst political crisis for
decades with Mr Rajoy now mulling the unprecedented step of invoking
the constitution to dissolve the Catalan parliament and trigger
regional elections.
Catalonia
will declare independence form Spain on Monday.
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