The former military officials of Spain are thinking of a coup against the “Sanchez” government.
While the anger of the people from different groups about the concessions that "Pedro Sanchez" gave to the separatists in order to support themselves in order to take over the new government does not subside these days, the former military officials in this country are also planning a coup against his government. they do. |
According to the international group Tasnim news agency, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung wrote in a report: popular anger It is increasing compared to Pedro Sánchez, the Prime Minister of Spain. In Madrid alone, 170,000 people demonstrated over the weekend, and former army officials even want to instigate a coup.
Thus in Spain, resistance to Pedro Sánchez’s planned amnesty law for separatists, The re-elected Socialist prime minister is on the rise.
About 170,000 demonstrators gathered in Madrid’s Plaza de Cibeles on Saturday, according to police, almost twice as many as last weekend, when 80,000 People were counted in Madrid during protests against a planned amnesty for Catalan separatists.
On Saturday, some demonstrators marched from the center in front of the headquarters of the PSOE presidential party. Another group tried to demonstrate in front of the government headquarters in the Monclova Palace and blocked a highway there.
Meanwhile, dozens of retired Spanish army officers had already called on their activist comrades to oppose the leftist government of Sanchez. make a coup The signatories of the manifesto published on the Internet by the “Spanish Army Association” include several officers and generals.
At the end of 2020, retired military officers already had a private conversation about the necessity of a coup against the “social communist government” of Sanchez. They had plans.
The demonstrations in front of the PSOE headquarters in Madrid have been going on for almost two weeks and have turned violent many times. Other attacks on more than a hundred PSOE offices have already been reported across Spain. Right-wing extremists, neo-Nazis and supporters of Franco’s dictatorship are regularly among the demonstrators. PP politicians and the Vox leadership are also seen among the protesters.
Sánchez, who was sworn in for a third term on Friday, has yet to name a new government. There is a fierce dispute with his coalition partner Somar’s party over filling the five ministerial posts expected to be won by the left-wing coalition.
Spain’s right-wing conservatives and populists accuse Sanchez of wanting a “dictatorship”. establish and endanger democracy, the separation of powers and the unity of Spain. That is why, according to them, the Spaniards should demonstrate until new elections are held.
Sanchez was elected as the new prime minister on Thursday in the first round of voting with an absolute majority of parliamentarians. In this way, Pedro Sánchez, a social democrat, was confirmed as the prime minister of Spain for another four years.
This 51-year-old politician from the Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) has been in charge of the fourth largest economy of the European Union since mid-2018 with the government The minority governs.
The decisive factor for Sanchez’s re-election was the support of two Catalan parties, to whom he promised to enact an amnesty law for independence supporters of this separatist region.
Sanchez’s promised amnesty to separatists is particularly beneficial to those activists who were prosecuted by the Spanish justice system after Catalonia’s failed secession from Spain in 2017.
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Publisher | Tasnim News |