Today, 9 October, nine Nobel Peace Laureates sent an open letter to leaders of Spain and Catalonia supporting the calls for mediation and negotiations toward a peaceful resolution of the current standoff.



Whither Now Democracy in Spain? Mediation and Dialogue or More Violence and Alienation?

An Open Letter to Spain and Catalonia

We watched with growing concern the rising tension between Madrid and Catalonia in the lead up to the October 1st referendum regarding the future of Catalonia. Neither side is free of errors in dealing with the process, which did not start with this referendum but instead seven years ago with the Constitutional Tribunal invalidation of the 2010 autonomy statute passed by the Spanish Parliament.

While little has been done by the central government since then to adequately address the simmering issue, we would not have predicted the extreme and unhelpful measures emanating from Madrid in response to the referendum. The scenes of police brutality, violence and the use of rubber bullets against the Catalonian people on October 1st are not anything we would have expected in today’s Spain. We have joined leaders around the world in condemning the use of force in Catalonia – yet we see the apology of the Spanish government of that violence as a very small step in the right direction. Yet so much more needs to be done. And time is short.

While we do not take a position on constitutional issues, we believe that mature democracies find ways to allow freedom of expression. Other nations have done so with separatist referendums carried out, for example, by Scotland and by Quebec. In each case the “no” vote won. Scotland remains part of the UK and Quebec part of Canada. We believe that violent responses by a central government to desires for free expression of a citizenry only further heighten hostility and create disaffection where it might not have existed previously.

We support the calls for mediation and negotiations toward a peaceful resolution of the current standoff between the Spanish government and Catalonia. A people who feel repressed seldom go quietly into the night.

cc: European Commission

Signed by:

Jody Williams, Nobel Peace Prize (1997)

Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Prize (1976)

Betty Williams, Nobel Peace Prize (1976)

Dr. Sheldon Glashow, Nobel Prize in Physics (1979)

Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize (1980)

Yuan T. Lee, Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1986)

Dudley R. Herschbach, Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1986)

Robert Huber, Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1988)

Rigoberta Menchu Tum, Nobel Peace Prize (1992)

President F.W. de Klerk, Nobel Peace Prize (1993)

Sir Richard J. Roberts, Nobel Prize in Medicine (1993)

President José Ramos Horta, Nobel Peace Prize (1996)

Peter C. Doherty, Nobel Prize in Medicine (1996)

Gunter Blobel, Nobel Prize in Medicine (1999)

Tim Hunt, Nobel Prize in Medicine (2001)

Dr. Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Peace Prize (2003)

Peter Agre, Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2003)

Elfriede Jelinek, Nobel Prize in Literature (2004)

J. Robin Warren, Nobel Prize in Medicine (2005)

Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio, Nobel Prize in Literature (2008)

Jack W. Szostak, Nobel Prize in Medicine (2009)

Tawakkol Karman, Nobel Peace Prize (2011)

Leymah Gbowee, Nobel Peace Prize (2011)

Bengt Holmstrom, Nobel Prize in Economics (2016)

PDF: Nobel Open Letter to Spain and Catalonia

En espagnol:

Carta Abierta de Nobeles a España y Cataluña