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Italian MPs back resolution on Palestine independence

February 27, 2015 By administrator

A Palestinian waves his country’s national flag.

A Palestinian waves his country’s national flag.

Italian parliamentarians have approved a non-binding resolution which calls on the government to recognize Palestine as an independent state, amid growing calls for the recognition of Palestine as a sovereign state.

The resolution was passed on Friday with as many as 300 members of Italy’s Chamber of Deputies voting in favor of the resolution. Forty-five opposed. report presstv

The motion for recognizing Palestine as an independent state was presented by Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s Democratic Party (PD).

Earlier this month, Belgium’s parliament approved a resolution calling for Palestine to be recognized as an independent state.

Sweden is the only European country that has officially recognized Palestine’s statehood, although several other parliaments in the 28-nation European Union (EU) have also made similar moves demanding that their governments recognize Palestine as a state.

Israel has been angered by the motions submitted to European parliaments.

On December 2, 2014, French lawmakers voted overwhelmingly in favor of a motion to recognize Palestine as an independent state. The motion, urging the government to recognize Palestine as a sovereign state, was backed by a majority of 339 lawmakers while 151 members voted against.

On November 18, 2014, Spanish lawmakers overwhelmingly approved a non-binding resolution on recognizing a Palestinian state.

Britain and Ireland have also passed similar non-binding motions.

On November 29, 2012, the 193-member United Nations General Assembly voted to upgrade Palestine’s status to non-member observer state.

Palestinians are seeking to create an independent state on the territories of the West Bank, East al-Quds (Jerusalem), and the Gaza Strip and are demanding that Israel withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories. Israel, however, has refused to return to the 1967 borders and is unwilling to discuss the issue of al-Quds.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: independent, Italian, MP, palastine, state

Europe: Who else may follow in Scotland’s footsteps?

September 13, 2014 By administrator

scotland-yesScotland’s independence referendum could lead to the founding of the European Union’s first new state. DW presents some of Western Europe’s other separatist movements.

In Europe’s eastern half, the disintegration of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia created many new countries. In Western Europe, however, borders of the old nation states seemed to be carved in stone. There have been secessionist tendencies, some of them militant, but they never seemed to have a shot in reality.

That has changed with the planned referendum in Scotland. London has stated it will respect the Scottish people’s will and would even release them from the United Kingdom. And polls show that a “yes” to independence is possible. This could embolden a host of other independence movements across Western Europe.

Scotland

The union between Scotland and the rest of the United Kingdom has existed for more than 300 years. But it could soon come to an end, if the majority of Scots votes for independence on September 18. The straight forward yes-or-no question about secession might not even have been necessary, had the British government allowed a third option of more autonomy. Most Scots would have almost certainly decided on this.

But London didn’t permit that, apparently assuming that full independence would scare off most Scottish people. This plan could now go awry. If a majority votes for secession, Europe could witness the rebirth of the Scottish state on March 24, 2016.

Catalonia

Nowhere in Western Europe has Scotland been more of a role model than in Catalonia. During the Franco regime, Catalan was prohibited. The region currently has a high level of cultural and political autonomy and its own regional parliament. But that’s not enough for many Catalans. They want their own state, mainly for economic reasons. They say that rich Catalonia is being sucked dry by the whole Spanish state.

Since the beginning of the economic crisis, the number of supporters of independence has significantly risen. The regional government in Barcelona wants to hold a referendum just like the Scottish one in November. But unlike the British government, Madrid doesn’t want to comply. A confrontation seems inevitable.

Basque Country

Basque nationalism and the Basque language were also oppressed during Franco’s dictatorship. But the Spanish Basque Country is in worse economic shape than Catalonia. A minority of today’s Basque nationalists is a lot more militant, though. The Basque underground organization ETA has killed more than 800 people in 50 years to efforts to achieve secession from Madrid. Three years ago, ETA renounced violence. But neither assaults nor negotiations have brought Basque Country closer to a referendum – let alone independence. The Spanish central government alone would be able to hold such a referendum and Madrid rejects this just like a referendum in Catalonia.

Flanders

In Belgium’s most recent parliamentary elections, the New Flemish Alliance under Bart de Wever became the strongest power in Flanders. De Wever is convinced that the Belgian state will go up in smoke anyway, so he wants to establish an independent Flanders in negotiations. Flemish separatism is a special case: Belgium only consists of the Dutch-language Flanders, the French-language Wallonia, which also includes a German-speaking community, and the officially bilingual Brussels.

Should Flanders secede, Belgium would lose significantly more than half of its population and economic power. There’d be little left of Belgium. A big contentious issue in that case would be Brussels, which is also the seat of EU and NATO. It also remains unclear what would happen to Wallonia. There has been talk of joining it with France, Luxembourg or even Germany. But so far, the Belgians have always managed to pull together.

“Padania”

The northern Italian secessionist movement has a solely economic motivation. The North with the regions Lombardy, Aosta Valley, Piedmont, Liguria, Venetia and Emilia Romagna generates a big part of Italy’s national product with its industrial companies and banks. Many northern Italians believe that the people in central and south Italy fritter away their hard earned money. In the 1990s, the Lega Nord party called for a full secession of “Padania,” a name derived from the Italian “pianura padana” for the Po Valley. Today, Lega Nord is more moderate. At the moment, the group only asks that the North can keep three quarters of the generated money instead of transferring it to Rome first.

South Tyrol

In South Tyrol, economic and historic-cultural factors come together. South Tyrol belonged to Austria-Hungary until the end of the First World War and was then adjudged to Italy. After a phase of Italianification during Mussolini’s regime, South Tyrol gained more and more political and linguistic autonomy after the Second World War. The wealthy region is even allowed to keep a large part of their state income.

For a long time, South Tyrol’s citizens seemed satisfied. But the national debt crisis has lit new fire under the separatist movement. After Greece, Italy is the most in-debt country in the eurozone. Many South Tyrol citizens who are doing very well themselves don’t want to have anything to do with Italy’s problems, so more and more of them call for a secession from Rome.

Corsica

For a long time, the French state tried to completely crowd out the Corsican language from public life and the island’s schools. Attempts to gain autonomy were fought. Militant groups, mostly the FLNC, have tried for years to get rid of France with violence, by attacking representatives or symbols of the French states and continental French citizens’ vacation homes.

This summer, the FLNC announced that they would not use violence anymore. But the potential for conflict remains: careful suggestions for autonomy by the socialist French government under Lionel Jospin in 2000 angered the conservative opposition. They believed that if autonomy was granted, other regions like the Bretagne or Alsace would also ask for independence. Traditionally, Paris has little respect for regional languages, since politicians in the French capital consider them dangerous for the unity of the country.

Bavaria

Few Bavarians probably seriously consider founding their own state. Bavaria already has “state” in its official name of “Freistaat Bayern” – the free state of Bavaria. But Germany’s southernmost state could probably survive on its own. It’s the largest German state area-wise. With more than 13 million inhabitants, it has more people than Sweden or Portugal and one of the highest economic performances of any German state. Should the wish for more Bavarian autonomy arise, then it would be because of the “Länderfinanzausgleich” – an agreement that the more wealthy German states support the poorer ones. Bayern would like to pay less into the large pot. Bavarian secessionists do exist: the conservative politician Wilfried Scharnagel (CSU) calls for Bavaria’s separation from Germany in his 2012 book. But so far, no larger movement has arisen.

Source: DW.COM

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: footsteps, independent, Scotland

Mosul: Najafi calls for an indepedent Sunni province

July 3, 2014 By administrator

(IraqiNews.com) The governor of Nineveh province, Ethel Nujaifi, called for the formation of an autonomous Sunni Province, pointing out the loss of confidence in the Central Government’s military forces, which have indepedent-Sunni-provincerecently suffered major setbacks against insurgents belonging to the organization of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, ISIS or DAASH.

Najafi said in a statement that self-determination has become an urgent need for Iraqi Sunnis and that Sunnis cannot accept the status quo in which they have been marginalized by successive governments as well as indirectly targeted through anti-terrorism laws and de-Baathification programs.

He said that the political project of an autonomous Sunni province must be linked to the formation of an internal security force and sources of funding for the project.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: independent, Iraq, ISIS, Mosul

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