鈥淭oday is an important one for us, because we would like to think that if the Kurds say that the only friend they have is the mountains, from today forward they have another friend, which is the Catalan people.鈥
With these words, Eul脿lia Reguant, MP for the left independentist People鈥檚 Unity List (CUP), ended her October 19 presentation to the Catalan parliament of a resolution that extended official recognition to the Autonomous Administration of North-East Syria (AANES), commonly known as Rojava.
The Catalan parliament is the first in the world to formally recognise the AANES.
The AANES is a federation that groups together seven regions, three of them of Kurdish majority centred on Rojava, but also including regions of Arab majority, such as Raqqa, which the Kurdish militias liberated from Islamic State in 2015.
The territory covered by AANES, which also includes Armenian, Assyrian, Turkman and Circassian minorities, has a decentralised form of government which the Kurdish liberation movement wants to see extended as a confederal model for Syria as a whole.
The resolution for recognition was carried 80 to 49. No MP abstained in a vote that saw parliament鈥檚 pro-independence majority 鈥 the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), Together for Catalonia (Junts) and the CUP 鈥 joined by Together We Can (ECP), progressive force whose best-known figure is Barcelona mayor Ada Colau.
All Catalonia鈥檚 Spanish-unionist parties voted against. The main opposition force, the Party of Socialists of Catalonia (PSC), local franchise of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), was joined by the right-wing People鈥檚 Party (PP) and Citizens and the far-right Vox in denouncing a proposition they saw as usurping the Spanish government鈥檚 prerogative of diplomatic recognition.
The PSC asked for the resolution to be voted on paragraph by paragraph, separating the issue of recognition from that of cooperation and so allowing it differentiation from the unionist right. Its last three points were carried by a 110-vote majority, with the PSC鈥檚 33 MPs voting in favour (see translation at end of article).
Background
As members of a nation that has had its language and culture repressed and right to self-determination denied, many Catalans have long felt an affinity with the Kurdish struggle.
Solidarity brigades have visited Kurdistan鈥檚 various regions since the end of the Franco dictatorship. In June, a Catalan delegation of MPs, councillors and social movement activists visited Rojava and Iraqi Kurdistan, to learn about Rojava鈥檚 experience of grassroots democracy and assess opportunities for cooperation in post-war reconstruction.
The resolution adopted by the Catalan parliament was the result of this visit. Its preamble stressed the progressive character of the Rojava revolution鈥檚 鈥渄emocratic confederalism鈥 and the opportunity the strong network of grassroots solidarity between Catalonia and Kurdistan offers 鈥渢o explore and advance towards forms of reconstruction distant from those of unbridled capitalism鈥.
It also invoked Catalonia鈥檚 example of council-to-council support for Bosnia in the 1990s Yugoslav civil war and the parliament鈥檚 2019-2022 Master Plan for Development and Cooperation, which requires 鈥渟pecial attention to the Sahrawi, Palestinian and Kurdish peoples鈥.
Debate
Discussion of the resolution began with Reguant explaining the origin, consolidation and gains of the Rojava revolution, culminating in its 2015 defeat of Islamic State, but today under threat from Turkey.
She said: 鈥淭oday is an important step for the Kurdish movement, because it is the first parliament to recognise the administration of North-East Syria and thus to implicitly recognise the political contribution of democratic confederalism; a proposition based on democracy, on feminism, on another way of understanding economy, and on the recognition of the diversity, religious and ethnic, that characterises the region.鈥
Susanna Segovia (ECP) described the Rojava revolution as 鈥渆ssentially feminist, a revolution that fights against the patriarchy, that puts women at the centre鈥.
She emphasised that it was time to 鈥済et beyond declarations鈥 and develop through the Catalan Agency for Cooperation and Development 鈥渢he specific lines of intervention for implementing this recognition.鈥
Junts鈥 speaker Francesc de Dalmases stressed the basis of the Rojava experience in the principle of self-determination and took aim at the Spanish coalition government of the PSOE and Unidas Podemos (UP) for supplying arms to Turkey.
鈥淭oday, right now, the Turkish army, the army of Erdogan is raping, executing, pursuing and killing the men and women of Kurdistan, killing their trees, killing their water resources [鈥
鈥淏ut do you know what鈥檚 happening? Turkey is a key ally of the government of [Spanish prime minister] Pedro S谩nchez鈥︹
Dalmases ended with this jab at ECP, supporter of the PSOE-UP government: 鈥淲e want to say 鈥榶es鈥 to Rojava, 鈥榶es鈥 to a peaceful way for solving the conflicts in the Middle East. Therefore, we can鈥檛 be accomplices of the Spanish government, nor of its budget nor of its taxes, nor of the way it manages its foreign policy.鈥
ERC speaker Ruben Wagensberg, refugee rights activist who initiated the鈥淥ur House, Your House鈥 march in Barcelona in 2017, was the last speaker in favour. He underlined the Turkish state鈥檚 efforts to strangle the threat of Rojava鈥檚 good example as well as the Spanish military presence on the Turkey-Syria border.
This harsh reality made recognition of AANES essential 鈥 the parliament was not just being asked to help another poverty-stricken part of the world.
Wagensberg said: 鈥淲e ask for this recognition against the totalitarianisms, against the fascisms, against the radicalisms 鈥 there, in the form of religious radicalism known to everyone in the actions of Islamic State.鈥
Against
The case against recognition was put by David P茅rez (PDC). It was legalistic (鈥淭he recognition of this AANES could compromise the exclusive competence envisaged in our legislation for matters of international relations鈥) and sarcastic (鈥渞ecognition by other countries has been very, very limited鈥).
For the Vox speaker Alberto Tarradas, recognition of AANES was a distraction: 鈥淚n truth, you people aren鈥檛 concerned about the Kurdish case; you鈥檙e only interested in looking for oppressed peoples with whom to compare yourselves and so try to legitimise your project for break-up [of Spain].鈥
Citizens鈥 speaker Ignacio Mart铆n described any parallel between Catalonia and Kurdistan as 鈥渁bsolutely pornographic鈥. The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) was the Kurdish equivalent of dissolved Basque military-terrorist organisation Basque Homeland and Freedom (ETA) and Abdullah 脰calan, its imprisoned leader and the inspirer of the Rojava revolution, a 鈥渕an wanted all over the world for very serious crimes鈥.
PP speaker Lorena Rold谩n sneered that the proposal to establish a coordinating table for a solidarity network with Rojava was 鈥渕ore of the caviar left from the high part of Barcelona than of people suffering war, famine and sickness鈥.
The Catalan parliament鈥檚 resolution on AANES will most probably join its many progressive antecedents in the graveyard of the Spanish Constitutional Court.
In 2008, the court struck down a protocol on cooperation in health between the Basque government and the government of Iraqi Kurdistan. The grounds were that the Basques were invading an area of competence of the Spanish state and de facto attributing to Iraqi Kurdistan the status of independent country.
However, that prospect does not diminish the importance of this vote, which was received with stormy applause by the solidarity activists in parliament鈥檚 public gallery. Rojava鈥檚 just and inspiring cause had received a powerful boost.
As Catalan-Kurdish journalist Amina Hussein told Vilaweb: 鈥淭he recognition has given the people hope that pressure can be brought on the Spanish congress and even on Europe to pressure Turkey and denounce the crimes its army commits.鈥
[Dick Nichols is 麻豆传媒's European correspondent, based in Barcelona.]
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Resolution on recognising the AANES
The Parliament of Catalonia:
1. Recognises the existence of the Autonomous Administration of North-East Syria, with its foundation of democratic confederalism, as a political subject and urges Catalan institutions to establish formal relations with this administration.
2. Emphasises the potential of democratic confederalism, which is based on the principles of municipalism, feminism and social environmentalism, to be a peaceful, inclusive, democratic and coexistence-based solution for the Middle East.
3. Calls on the institutions, civil society and citizens of Catalonia to promote a network of solidarity to participate in the reconstruction of the region and in solidarity with its citizens, both with regard to the material rebuilding of the country and to the permanent or temporary reception of refugees: mirroring in this way the solidarity network between Catalonia and Bosnia at the beginning of the 1990s, based on fraternal relations between the two peoples, cooperation, citizen participation and an active role for local government.
4. Urges the Government of Catalonia to initiate a coordination table of administrations, social organisations and civil society to promote this solidarity network.