Catalan leader calls independence referendum, defying Madrid
The Spanish region of Catalonia has voted to call a referendum on its proposed independence from Madrid in a widely predicted move following the recent poll in Scotland

Catalonia’s president on Saturday formally called a referendum to decide whether Spain’s richest region should be independent, defying Madrid which has vowed to block the move.
The Spanish government has said it will appeal to the Constitutional Court, which is expected to annul the decree signed by Catalan leader Artur Mas.
Encouraged by the independence referendum in Scotland this month, 1.8 million people protested in Barcelona on September 11 demanding to be allowed to hold their own vote.
“We want to vote,” Mas said after he signed the decree calling a referendum in a ceremony at the Generalitat Palace in Barcelona.
Catalonia is Spain’s economic powerhouse, although it too suffered in the property crash and resulting crisis that gripped the rest of the country from 2008 to 2012.
Proud of their Catalan language and culture, many of the region’s 7.5 million inhabitants feel short-changed by the government in Madrid, which redistributes their taxes.