Politics

Venice will host a referendum on separation from Italy

March 16, a referendum on independence will be held not only in Crimea, but also in Venice. However, the role model for the Venetians was rather Scotland and Catalonia.

Voting will begin on Sunday as part of a referendum on the separation of Venice and its environs from the rest of Italy in order to restore the status of a sovereign state with a thousand-year history.

The “Serene” or Serene Republic of Venice was an independent trading republic for a thousand years, until the last Doge (head of state) was deposed by Napoleon in 1797. The republic included not only Venice itself, but also its environs, now united by the Veneto region. It is there from Sunday to Friday that a referendum will be held.

For decades, residents of the rich northern regions of Italy have expressed their deep discontent with Rome’s ineffective and corrupt policies, because of which hard-earned income earned by taxes flows south and often diverges.

The campaigners were inspired by the example of Scotland, where a referendum on independence from Britain will be held in September this year, as well as Catalonia, half of whose population declare their desire to break with Spain. Activists claim that according to a recent poll, 65% of the population of the Veneto region, including historic cities such as Treviso, Vicenza and Verona, are positive about breaking up relations with Rome.

Approximately 3.8 million people were allowed to vote in Veneto, and independence supporters expect a majority vote. They want to call the future independent state “Repubblica Veneta” in Russian “Venetian Republic”.

Moreover, activists of the movement know that voting does not have legal force for the Roman government and can cause a strong constitutional commotion. However, they hope that if everything goes well, they will be able to start taking steps to withhold taxes in the region, which will in fact become a unilateral declaration of independence.

"If the majority vote in favor, we have specialists who will write a declaration of independence. There are also entrepreneurs in the region who are ready now to pay taxes to local authorities instead of Rome," said Lodovico Pizzati, spokeswoman for the Independence Movement of Venice .

"We will not have it like in Scotland, where London expressed its intention to agree with the results of the popular vote for independence. Rome tried to ignore us, but we will not wait for his consent. People are tired of the economic crisis in which the Roman government led us. Scotland and Catalonia are ahead of us, but the land of Veneto is rich and generous, the independence movement has been developing here since 1970, "said Professor Pisatti, who once worked as an economist at the World Bank and is now a lecturer in California State. om university.

However, many residents of Veneto speak out against secession from Italy. "The idea of ​​a Europe consisting of many regions is very outdated. Now we should fight for a Europe of strong nations," said Pietro Piccinetti, head of the opposing committee. "We want change, but within a strong Italy."

By coincidence, voting in Venice will begin on the same day as a referendum in Crimea over separation from Ukraine.

Raffaele Serafini, another independence activist, said: "The Venetians want to free themselves not only from Italy, but also from the euro, the European Union and NATO".

Like several other Italian regions, Veneto is connected with the rest of the country by rather fragile ties that arose not so long ago. After Napoleon's conquest in 1797, which ended the independence of Venice, the city was part of the Austrian Empire for 60 years. And only in 1866 became a part of the new Italian kingdom.

Watch the video: 'We will be richest in Europe': Venice wants independence from Rome (May 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Politics, Next Article

Residents of South Tyrol for lifting the ban on hunting bears
Society

Residents of South Tyrol for lifting the ban on hunting bears

Local farmers complain that the success of the EU program to return the brown bear population to northern Italy poses an increasing threat to their livestock, and possibly to people. Returning home late at night to their family hotel in the mountains in the Italian region of South Tyrol, Marcus and Karin Kerskbamer (Markus and Karin Kerschbamer) immediately felt that something was wrong.
Read More
Italian doctors refuse to have abortions
Society

Italian doctors refuse to have abortions

Despite the fact that abortion operations in Italy have long been recognized by law, recently more and more doctors refuse to have abortions, thereby forcing women to look for other, sometimes unsafe, options. After Benito Mussolini’s ban on abortion was lifted in 1978 due to the efforts of a group of influential women politicians, including former Foreign Minister Emma Bonina, Italians were given the legislative right to terminate their pregnancy within the first three months after conception.
Read More
Italy has the dirtiest air in Europe
Society

Italy has the dirtiest air in Europe

Almost 90% of European cities have exceeded the norms of permissible air pollution, but not one can be compared with Italy: the worst situation is in Padua, and of the 30 most polluted cities in Europe, 23 are Italian. Although pollutant emissions across Europe have declined, 88% of European cities are still exposed to substances recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) as harmful to the body.
Read More
Graphene-based self-cleaning windows invented in Italy
Society

Graphene-based self-cleaning windows invented in Italy

In the course of research at two Italian universities, Sassari and Cagliari, an innovative “chemical exfoliation” technology was developed that allows the windows to “self-clean” using only sunlight. The new development is another way to use the material, for the study of which in 2010, scientists have already received the Nobel Prize.
Read More