Spain’s success at the World Cup has highlighted the kind of deep political divisions which mean that some Spanish residents would have been cheering on the Netherlands in last night’s final.
The team’s unprecedented performance has prompted the unveiling of Spanish flags on balconies in areas where nationalist flags would be more typical, irritating separatists in the northern Basque and Catalan regions.
PHOTO: REUTERS
“If it were up to me, I’d have Netherlands beat Spain 30-0,” said Inaki Atxutegi, a 40-year-old economist from the Basque port of Bilbao.
The Basque and Catalan regions have different languages and cultural identities, and many of their residents want greater, if not full, autonomy from Madrid.
“[Madrid politicians] are using the success of the Spanish team, made up almost entirely of Catalans and Basques, to sell a concept of Spain that many Basques do not share,” Atxutegi said.
Soccer achievement has also clashed with a controversial ruling by the Constitutional Court on a statute setting out the limits of Catalan autonomy from Madrid.
The court concluded that Catalonia could not be recognized as a separate nation and hundreds of thousands joined a protest in Barcelona on Saturday.
“There will end up being more Spanish flags because of the Spain-Netherlands match on Sunday than Catalan flags because of Saturday’s protest,” the deputy head of Catalonia’s regional government, Josep Lluis Carod-Rovira, wrote in a blog.
Spain coach Vicente del Bosque told a press conference in Johannesburg on Saturday he hoped the harmonious relationship between his players and their emphasis on teamwork would inspire similar feelings back home.
“I hope that we’ll look at things in a less radical way and through football, create better relations among the regions in our country,” said the 59-year-old, who is from Salamanca.
Midfielder Xavi, who plays for Barcelona, said: “There are many players from the Barca team and that, of course, makes me very proud, but it’s not only about Barca. We want everyone to feel very proud in the whole of Spain, not only in Catalonia, about the football we are playing.”
Even showing Spain’s games on public screens is proving controversial.
The city of Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, had up to now declined to show Spain’s games on public screens, despite the fact that seven players in the starting 11 for the semi-final against Germany last Wednesday play for Barcelona.
Yesterday, however, it was showing the final on a public screen in the city, something greeted as a victory in itself by right-wing Spanish media commentators in Madrid, but some are resentful that the Catalan national team are not able to compete in top international tournaments, especially since Carles Puyol’s match-winning header against Germany was the result of a move worked out on the training ground at Barcelona, the defender claimed.
Neither world soccer’s governing body FIFA nor its European equivalent, UEFA, recognize the Catalan team, which typically plays a friendly against an international side in December each year.
“I don’t feel Spanish at all, I can’t help that, but Puyol and the rest would rather play for a Catalan national team, if only we were allowed to create one,” said Marc Morell, 46, from the Catalan city of Tarragona.
They only play for Spain because they have no choice,” he said.
Still, for some like Aitor Zuazua, a 32-year-old stockbroker from the Basque town of Getxo, soccer and politics do not mix.
“I’d never put a [Spanish] red shirt on, but I still want Spain to win,” he said.
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