lunes, 16 de diciembre de 2013

CATALONIA -- Nació Digital: El Financial Times reclama «una solució negociada» per a Catalunya

Nació Digital: El Financial Times reclama «una solució negociada» per a Catalunya

 The Financial Times calls "a negotiated solution" to Catalonia The British newspaper editorial warns that the PP and the PSOE "must live up to" the circumstances Special referendum on independence for Catalonia on November 9, 2014





 "It is a political problem that requires a negotiated solution." It describes the FT situation in Catalonia in its Monday edition. In an editorial, the British newspaper claimed "more federalism in Spain a crying need for an institutional renewal" and ensures that the two sections referendum proposed by Catalan parties "have the ingredients for a solution." "Not only are the Catalans, but the main Spanish parties, the PP and the Socialists Rajoy, who should be at the height of the situation," demands the editorial admits that Spain has failed to be a "Multinational comfortable house" by its "cultural diverse peoples." The editorial, titled 'The next crisis in Spain', says the announcement of a referendum in Catalonia and said "not too late to accommodate the Catalans" in Spanish. The newspaper notes that "nearly two-thirds of the parliament of Catalonia has called a referendum on independence" leading Spain to a "robust constitutional conflict." According to the FT, things "were not going well." "Politicians from both sides of this growing chasm have become statesmen to avoid what is a political problem in the bud becomes a problem that threatens their own state" defense. The publisher says Artur Mas, the Spanish government has taken unawares "to form an alliance with the separatist elements of the Catalan left." "They have set a date for a referendum this November that prompted the Catalans two questions: Catalonia want to be a state, and if they want, they want this state to be independent?" Says the newspaper. The prestigious financial newspaper legitimizes the process ensuring that within their own question "are the ingredients for the solution," he believes should be federal. "Spain was prized for its transition from Franco's dictatorship to a decentralized democracy. Yet it has become a multinational home comfortable enough for its various cultural villages," said the newspaper. According to the editorial, the Spanish Constitution "had enough flexibility" to accommodate the Catalans "until the PP Rajoy was sabotaged in 2010 to persuade their nominated Constitutional Court to cut out a part of the Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia ". The newspaper said that English "identical articles" statutes of Balearics and Valencia "is not played." "That shot Catalan separatism, hitherto a peripheral movement," said. "Rather than lead his people, is being led by Artur Mas village, and Rajoy has cornered between rock and insisting that the post-Franco constitution, which enshrines the indissoluble unity of Spain is immutable, "warns the FT. The newspaper said that according to surveys, the Catalans prefer "self-government, including more fiscal autonomy, but go for it even if the only alternative is the status quo that the Rajoy government is reducing."