Venice votes on cutting ties with Italy

Italians in Venice and its surrounding region are voting this week on whether to break away from rest of the country and form their own country, organisers said.

Rome: Italians in Venice and its surrounding region are voting this week on whether to break away from rest of the country and form their own country, organisers said.

The online vote, organised by local independence parties, is not legally binding but aims to galvanise support for a bill calling for a referendum on whether the region of Veneto should split from Italy.

The new Republic of Veneto would be inspired by the ancient Venetian republic -- a rich economic, cultural and trading power which existed from the 7th century until its fall to Napoleon in 1797.

The Indipendenza Veneta party behind the bill said the separatist movement was fuelled by the government`s apparent inability to stamp down on corruption, protect its citizens from a damaging recession and plug waste in the poorer south.

"We no longer want to be part of a country that has gone to the wall. Nothing works anymore," Nicola Gardin from the party said.

"Italy is weighed down by an enormous level of public debt, thousands of businesses have closed, we have lost count of the number of people who have committed suicide in Veneto," he said.
The region pays around 71 billion euros (USD 98.5 billion) in taxes to Rome, 21 billion euros more than it receives in investment and services.

The latest polls show that -- of the 3.8 million people eligible to vote in the region -- around 60 per cent is in favour of independence.

Despite protests that any attempt to split from Italy would be unconstitutional, the governor of the Veneto region Luca Zaia has told Italian media that secession is an option under international law.
Venetians will be closely watching independence movements in Scotland -- which will hold a referendum in September -- and Catalonia, he said.

"If Barcelona gets independence, Veneto could adopt the same method and get it too. We have knocked politely on the door of federalism, but it did not open. Now we will break down the door," he said.

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