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Pedro Sánchez sworn in as Spanish PM, amid right-wing protests

Pedro Sánchez has been sworn in again as Spain's Prime Minister after striking a deal to grant amnesty to Catalan separatists - a move that has angered the country's right.

Spain's Pedro Sanchez has once again been sworn in as Prime Minister.
Spain's Pedro Sanchez has once again been sworn in as Prime Minister. (Photo by Andres BALLESTEROS / POOL / AFP)

Spain’s Socialist leader Pedro Sánchez was sworn in Friday as prime minister for another term with the right vowing to keep up its protests against his decision to grant Catalan separatists an amnesty.

Sánchez, in office since 2018, took the oath before King Felipe VI at the Zarzuela Palace near Madrid, a day after he won the endorsement of a majority of lawmakers in Spain’s fragmented parliament to form a new minority coalition government with hard-left party Sumar.

His Socialists finished second in an inconclusive July general election but he reached deals with several smaller parties to back him in the parliamentary vote for another term, including Catalan and Basque separatists.

To win the support of two Catalan separatist parties, he agreed to grant an unpopular amnesty to hundreds of people facing legal action for their role in Catalonia’s separatist movement over the past decade.

That includes the wealthy northeastern region’s failed secession bid in 2017 that involved a violence-marred referendum that was banned by the courts and followed by a short-lived declaration of independence.

Critics say the amnesty is a self-serving measure to allow Sánchez to remain in power and accuse him of trampling on the rule of law.

The amnesty bill  — which still must be approved by parliament — has sparked protests across Spain in recent weeks, with another scheduled for Saturday at noon (1100 GMT) in Madrid which top figures from the conservative Popular Party (PP) and far-right Vox have vowed to attend.

“The civic resistance is not going to give up,” PP secretary general Cuca Gamarra wrote on social network X, formerly Twitter.

Protests continue

Thousands have congregated each night for more than a week outside the Socialist party’s headquarters in Madrid in rallies organised by the far right against the amnesty. Some protests have turned violent.

“We will continue to support all mobilisations and all calls to oppose” this “government born from an unconstitutional pact”, said Vox leader Santiago Abascal, who has called the amnesty deal a “coup d’etat”.

In a sign of the tensions the amnesty has sparked, dozens of retired right-wing generals issued a manifesto on Friday calling on “those responsible for defending the constitutional order” to “remove the prime minister” and “call” new elections.

The PP won most seats in the July election but fell short of a majority and its leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo was unable to get support from other parties to win his investiture vote in September.

Sánchez, who has made a career out of political gambles, has defended the amnesty, arguing it was constitutional and needed to “heal the wounds” opened by Catalonia’s independence push.

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MIDDLE EAST CRISIS

Israel to stop work of Spanish consulate for Palestinians

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said Friday he had decided to "sever the connection" between Spain's diplomatic mission and Palestinians in the occupied West Bank over Madrid's recognition of a Palestinian state.

Israel to stop work of Spanish consulate for Palestinians

“I have decided to sever the connection between Spain’s representation in Israel and the Palestinians, and to prohibit the Spanish consulate in Jerusalem from providing services to Palestinians from the West Bank,” Katz said in a post on X.

It was not immediately clear how Israel would carry out the threat.

Asked by AFP about the practicalities and consequences of Katz’s announcement, the foreign ministry did not immediately comment.

Katz said his decision was made “in response to Spain’s recognition of a Palestinian state and the anti-Semitic call by Spain’s deputy prime minister to… ‘liberate Palestine from the river to the sea'”.

Spain, Ireland and Norway announced Wednesday their decision to recognise the State of Palestine later this month, drawing rebuke from Israel.

READ MORE: Why is Spain so pro-Palestine?

The Israeli government denounced the largely symbolic move as a “reward for terror” as the war in the Gaza Strip, sparked by Hamas’s unprecedented October 7th attack, nears an eighth month.

The foreign ministry on Thursday warned that Israel’s ties with Ireland, Norway and Spain would face “serious consequences”.

Katz in his Friday announcement criticised remarks on X by the Spanish government’s number three Yolanda Díaz, a far-left party leader and labour minister.

Welcoming the announcement of the formal recognition of a Palestinian state, Díaz had said: “We cannot stop here. Palestine will be free, from the river to the sea.”

The pro-Palestinian rallying cry refers to historic Palestine’s borders under the British mandate, which extended from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean Sea, before the creation of Israel in 1948.

Critics perceive it as a call for the elimination of Israel, including its ambassador to Spain who condemned the minister’s remarks.

The phrase “from the river to the sea” is sometimes also used as a Zionist slogan for a Greater Israel that would span over the same territory.

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