Opinion

from the editor

marcela topor. mtopor@cataloniatoday.cat

Championing Catalonia abroad

Just a few months be­fore the de­ci­sive elec­tions on Sep­tem­ber 27, the Cata­lan gov­ern­ment has an­nounced a pro­ject to ex­pand its in­ter­na­tional pres­ence with plans to open 50 of­fi­cial del­e­ga­tions around the world. These of­fices, which the Span­ish gov­ern­ment calls “em­bassies” and which it has al­ready an­nounced it will im­pede, work in the same way as the Span­ish del­e­ga­tions opened in in­ter­na­tional cap­i­tals. Their remit is to at­tract in­vest­ment, pro­mote do­mes­tic prod­ucts and find op­por­tu­ni­ties on the in­ter­na­tional mar­ket. It is ob­vi­ous that the po­lit­i­cal mo­ment Cat­alo­nia is going through makes the open­ing of 50 new of­fices abroad a way of re­in­forc­ing the process to­wards in­de­pen­dence. The idea of Diplo­cat, the Gen­er­al­i­tat de­part­ment in charge of for­eign af­fairs, is to re­in­force Cat­alo­nia's po­si­tion abroad as an area of eco­nomic op­por­tu­nity, to help dy­namise the econ­omy and gain clear com­pet­i­tive ad­van­tages. But the in­ter­est of the in­ter­na­tional press in the Cata­lan sit­u­a­tion and the self-de­ter­mi­na­tion process of­fers these del­e­ga­tions a role that goes be­yond act­ing as mere com­mer­cial of­fices. The vast ma­jor­ity of the in­ter­na­tional media that has fo­cused on Cat­alo­nia shows that, in­deed, what is going on in the coun­try is both ex­cep­tional and ex­tra­or­di­nary.

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