Opinion

THE LAST WORD

2015's unfinished business

Beyond arguments about whether it is good for Catalonia to be independent or not, the sovereignty process is not going away any time soon

At my age it's hard to re­mem­ber what you had for break­fast, never mind what hap­pened 12 months ago. That's why I love a re­view of the year, to jog the mem­ory and bring my­self up to date. So, I hope you en­joyed our re­view of 2015 on pages 21-45. It is now a tra­di­tion at Cat­alo­nia Today to fin­ish the year with a wrap up of the pre­vi­ous 12 months, par­tic­u­larly when it has been such an ac­tion-packed year as this one.

How­ever, here I wanted to look ahead to 2016. Work­ing on the re­view of the year over the past cou­ple of weeks, it struck me how many of the events and sce­nar­ios we have wit­nessed and ex­pe­ri­enced are from over and will more than likely con­tinue into next year. Con­se­quently, what fol­lows is my pick of the is­sues that are far from over and can safely be la­belled “un­fin­ished busi­ness”.

Sov­er­eignty process

If you live in Cat­alo­nia, what­ever your po­lit­i­cal per­sua­sion, the drive to­wards in­de­pen­dence tak­ing place in the coun­try is clearly of some im­por­tance. Be­yond ar­gu­ments about whether it is good for Cat­alo­nia to be in­de­pen­dent or not, the sov­er­eignty process is not going away any time soon. In one cor­ner we have a Cata­lan par­lia­ment with a pro-in­de­pen­dence ma­jor­ity and the de­mo­c­ra­tic man­date re­quired to move to­wards cre­at­ing a Cata­lan state. In the other cor­ner, is the Span­ish state, which has its own man­date to en­sure the unity of Spain as set out in the con­sti­tu­tion. In be­tween there is a Span­ish gen­eral elec­tion and surely no end of to-ing and fro-ing to come. Nat­u­rally, the in­ter­na­tional com­mu­nity is re­luc­tant to get in­volved, but in the end it might be the only way out of the in­evitable stale­mate.

Is­lamic State

After the awful ter­ror­ist at­tacks in Paris, a tough re­ac­tion was to be ex­pected from the French gov­ern­ment. With the coun­try hurt and angry, de­clar­ing war on Is­lamic State is no doubt what many peo­ple wanted to hear. The prob­lem is that such an at­ti­tude does lit­tle to noth­ing to ad­dress the is­sues that led to the ex­is­tence of such a phe­nom­e­non as Is­lamic State in the first place. Most of us would ac­cept that oc­ca­sion­ally war is un­avoid­able, but it rarely does much more than cause yet more deaths and store trou­ble for the fu­ture. We are un­likely to see a so­lu­tion to the prob­lems of the Mid­dle East next year, so let's just hope some real progress can be made and that the death toll can be kept to a min­i­mum.

Review of 2015 Pages 21-45
Another 12 months, another review of the year. As is now customary, Catalonia Today's December issue includes an overview of the previous 12 months, highlighting some of the key moments at home and abroad. This year is naturally dominated by the Catalan sovereignty process, but in among the stream of political events we have witnessed recently are reminders about what happened in the worlds of sport, culture, food, notable deaths, anniversaries and society. And don't forget to let us know what we left out!
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