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Catalan hometown of Spain’s star Yamal buzzing over teen’s Euro success

Every time Lamine Yamal scores, he holds up his fingers to sign the numbers 304 - the postcode of Rocafonda, the modest Catalan district where he grew up, which is bursting with pride over the 16-year-old's success in Euro 2024.

Catalan hometown of Spain's star Yamal buzzing over teen's Euro success
A man walks past a graffiti depicting Lamine Yamal in Rocafonda, the neighbourhood where he grew up. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

It’s not yet midday but there is a real buzz inside the local bar, El Cordobés, which is still reeling with excitement after Yamal, who used to come in with his dad, clutching a football, shot home the sublime goal against France that helped propel Spain to Sunday’s Euro 2024 final.

For years, people here to the north of Barcelona knew he was different but nobody could have predicted the lad would go on to become the youngest player to score in a European Championship.

“We knew he was going to play with Barcelona’s first team,” bar owner Juan Carlos Serrano says with a proud smile.

“But we had no idea would have the kind of impact he’s having now.”

On the wall behind him is a framed Barcelona shirt signed by Yamal that his father gave Serrano as thanks for his support during the years when the pair used to go to the bar before taking the train into the city for him to train with the club’s youth team — until he signed with their famed La Masia youth academy.

That was the last day Yamal came into the bar, but not the last time he came back to this district of Mataró, a city of 130,000 people that lies 30 kilometres (18 miles) up the coast from Barcelona where he spent some of his childhood and where many locals proudly show off photos with him.

Boys play football in Rocafonda, Yamal’s neighbourhood. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

‘A proud, happy father’

After his parents separated, Yamal lived between the nearby town of Granollers and Mataró, but his constant visits to his grandmother, who arrived from Morocco decades ago and still lives in Rocafonda, has kept up his ties to the neighbourhood where his father is greeted as a local hero.

Just back from Germany, where he watched Spain’s semi-final victory over France semi-final match, his neighbours are crowding around to congratulate him over his son’s stunning goal, which he still gets excited about.

“I lived every moment in that stadium just like any other Spanish fan, going crazy,” says Mounir Nasraoui exuberantly standing in the doorway of the bar.

And he will soon be going back, with more to celebrate: his son turns 17 on Saturday and on Sunday, he’s hoping for victory in the final against England.

Mounir Nasraoui, the father of Spain’s forward Lamine Yamal, smiles at ‘El Cordobés’ bar in Rocafonda. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

“As a father, I am proud, happy and grateful,” he said, thanking his neighbours for their support.

“This neighbourhood is proud of being the place where Lamine Yamal comes from.”

‘We have a star here!’

Several streets away, the blazing sun is not enough to stop the kids from playing football on a local pitch where Yamal too spent hours playing when he was small.

Everyone wants to be like him in this neighbourhood which is thrown into the limelight every time the young star player signs its 304 postcode.

“People get really excited about Lamine Yamal because nothing like this has ever happened here before,” explains Mamadou Sow, 32, who works in catering.

A resident of Rocafonda shows a photo of herself with Spain’s young star Lamine Yamal. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

“That gives the kids even more desire to do sports and other things ,” he told AFP, saying he was overjoyed to “finally” see the neighbourhood, which has come in for some negative press in recent years, being mentioned on TV for positive reasons.

“It’s exciting.”

Life has not been simple in this district on the outskirts of Mataro whose postcode is 08304 and which has a large immigrant population and a lower income than other more affluent neighbourhoods.

OPINION: Young black stars mirror migrants’ contribution to Spain

“We’ve always had a bad reputation for crime and other things, and to have someone so important shedding a different light on the neighbourhood is really positive,” said Rocio Escandell, head of the Rocafonda residents’ association.

Despite his youth, Yamal has long been venerated in his childhood home.

Outside the bakery that his uncle used to run by the local football pitch is a large painted image of him wearing a Barca shirt, his arms crossed and fingers signing the number 304.

Jauad Darraz, the new owner, is carrying out renovations so he can open a new bar.

But there are some things he does not intend to change.

“We’re changing everything except the picture,” he grins, referring to the painting.

“I like it because Lamine Yamal is from the neighbourhood… We have a star here!.”

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POLITICS

Catalan separatist wanted by Spain vows to return

Exiled Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont on Saturday vowed to return to Spain to attend a regional presidential debate expected in a few weeks even though he could be arrested.

Catalan separatist wanted by Spain vows to return

The controversial figure fled abroad in 2017 to avoid prosecution over a botched independence bid that year, and has since been wanted by the Spanish justice system.

Puigdemont risks being arrested if he returns to Spain, where he has been charged with terrorism, embezzlement and high treason.

Puigdemont said Saturday that returning to Spain “is what I committed to do and it is what we’re going to do”.

This was his first public address since the Spanish Supreme Court ruled on July 1 that an amnesty law for Catalan separatists would not apply to him.

READ ALSO: Several Catalan separatists return to Spain after amnesty

“My obligation is to go to the (Catalan) Parliament if there is a nomination debate. I will be there,” he told a rally of his Together for Catalonia party in southwestern France near the border with Spain.

Puigdemont said he hoped that if he returned, “the authorities would avoid what would be an illegal detention, an arbitrary detention”.

The politician, who was Catalonia’s regional president at the time of the failed secession, would have been the best-known beneficiary of the new law. Legal action against several other separatists has already been dropped.

He is also being investigated for “terrorism offences” for mass street protests in 2019, a charge that is not covered by the amnesty.

The independence figurehead had hoped to be elected president of Catalonia when his party came in second in elections in May, but lacked sufficient votes in parliament.

READ ALSO: Catalan independence for beginners: Five key points

Puigdemont’s separatists lost to a member of Spain’s ruling socialist party, Salvador Illa, who has been negotiating with the other major independence formation for the presidency.

Fresh elections will be called in October if parties do not name a president by August 26.

“There will be no more electoral campaigns in exile,” said Puigdemont, who campaigned for the Catalan elections from neighbouring France.

“No, the next election campaigns will be there (in Catalonia), and I will be there,” he said.

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