Barcelona (ACN).- A
Professor at the prestigious Paris Institute of Political Studies
(Science Po), Jean-Bernard Auby, has advocated for a temporary solution
to keep Catalonia within the European Union if it reaches independence
from Spain. This agreement should guarantee that Catalonia will not be
excluded from the EU even if it does not immediately become a
full-member. On Friday, during a conference in Sciences Po Toulouse by
the Public Diplomacy Council of Catalonia (Diplocat), Auby insisted that
“Catalonia and the Catalans are part of the EU” and for this reason,
according to him, if the country becomes independent “one shouldn’t, in a
mechanical way, impose on them to go through the procedures we impose
on those who are complete outsiders”. This conference entitled ‘The
right to self-determination of Catalonia. Legality and democratic
legitimacy’ is part of a series of debates on the right to
self-determination organised by the Diplocat and scheduled in
prestigious universities throughout Spain and Europe. The first cycle
was set in Science Po in Paris, before moving to London, Seville and
Uppsala (Sweden). The series will continue in Lisbon next February.In
the opening speech, Francesc Homs, the Catalan Government Spokesperson
and Minister for the Presidency, presented the political process to a
foreign audience, stressing the Catalans’ “utmost desire for dialogue”
with Spain and his awareness that it “is necessary to explain [the
situation] to the world first hand” in order to achieve maximum
involvement.
Professor at the prestigious Paris Institute of Political Studies
(Science Po), Jean-Bernard Auby, has advocated for a temporary solution
to keep Catalonia within the European Union if it reaches independence
from Spain. This agreement should guarantee that Catalonia will not be
excluded from the EU even if it does not immediately become a
full-member. On Friday, during a conference in Sciences Po Toulouse by
the Public Diplomacy Council of Catalonia (Diplocat), Auby insisted that
“Catalonia and the Catalans are part of the EU” and for this reason,
according to him, if the country becomes independent “one shouldn’t, in a
mechanical way, impose on them to go through the procedures we impose
on those who are complete outsiders”. This conference entitled ‘The
right to self-determination of Catalonia. Legality and democratic
legitimacy’ is part of a series of debates on the right to
self-determination organised by the Diplocat and scheduled in
prestigious universities throughout Spain and Europe. The first cycle
was set in Science Po in Paris, before moving to London, Seville and
Uppsala (Sweden). The series will continue in Lisbon next February.In
the opening speech, Francesc Homs, the Catalan Government Spokesperson
and Minister for the Presidency, presented the political process to a
foreign audience, stressing the Catalans’ “utmost desire for dialogue”
with Spain and his awareness that it “is necessary to explain [the
situation] to the world first hand” in order to achieve maximum
involvement.