Fresno Case
The Case Fresno is the name assigned by the Catalonia media and public opinion to the Federation of International Roller Sports (FIRS) assembly held at Fresno, California, United States, on 26 November 2004. It meant that for the first time in history, an international sport team that had been accepted provisionally was later not accepted definitely. At the same time, it was the first time that a regional sport team (Catalonia) had been registered with the opposition of the state the region belonged to (Spain). The Spanish sport organizations actively lobbied against the Catalonia membership among the members of the assembly. At the Fresno assembly, the membership application was rejected (8–114). However, the Federació Catalana de Patinatge brought the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (TAS) at Lausanne, which admitted irregularities in the assembly (notably the lack of secrecy in the vote), invalidated the vote, and forced the FIRS to repeat the vote following the FIRS statute rules.[1] An extraordinary FIRS assembly was held in Rome on November 24, 2005, and again rejected the membership application of the Catalan federation (125–43).
After being granted a temporary membership, Catalonia played the World Championship B, at Macau, (China), in October 2004, winning it.[2] As a result, Catalonia qualified to play the full World Championship, where it played in the same group as Spain.
Spain's opposition
Some Catalan media have denounced the pressions by the Spanish government and sport organizations on the members of the assembly.[3]
Representatives from Chile[4] or Italy (Sabatino Aracu, member of Forza Italia)[5] would allegedly suffered from such pressions or receive instructions from their national governments.
The Czech Republic representative Radek Pavelec admitted that his federation had received pressures from the Spanish government.[6]
In addition, a letter of the Consejo Superior de Deportes (CSD, the Spanish Council for Sports) to the Colombian federation in which the Spaniards were asking for the vote against Catalonia has been made public. In that letter the CSD stated that the recognition of Catalonia would alter the Spanish sport national unity and would create a wrong precedent. The same letter was sent to some other South American federations.[7]
The German representative admitted that she was contacted by the German MP for Sport demanding the vote against Catalonia. Literally he asked her to make sure she was coming back from Fresno with a "No" against Catalonia.
Repetition of the vote in Rome
On 29 November 2005, the FIRS assembly, meeting in Rome, he repeated the final vote on the admission of the Catalan Federation of Skating. In this case, the method of voting was secret and the president of the Catalan Federation, Ramon Basiana, was able to defend the nomination.
The extraordinary meeting in Rome of the FIRS rejected by 125 votes to 43 for admission as a full member of the Catalan Federation of Skating.
External links
- Plataforma Fresno 04
- Sentencia del Tribunal de Arbitraje del Deporte (PDF)
References
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-10-19. Retrieved 2005-11-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Hockey Patines - Eurosport - sports live, Futbol, Tenis, Ciclismo, Atletismo, Motor, Baloncesto, Juegos Olimpicos,Dep. Invierno". Archived from the original on 2005-04-26. Retrieved 2005-11-24.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3] Archived 2005-11-20 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [4]
- ^ [5] Archived 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- Court of Arbitration for Sport report (PDF) (in French)
- The Fresno assembly facts, minute by minute
- Official notice by the Federación Española de Patinaje on the results of the Court of Arbitration for Sport verdict[permanent dead link] (in Spanish).
- Catalonia's roller hockey status erased by massive vote. Rome assembly chronicle by the International Herald Tribune.
- Rome assembly Vilaweb new[permanent dead link] (in Catalan)
- Ramon Besiana speech at the Rome assembly on 24 November 2005[permanent dead link] (DOC file) (in English and Spanish)
- v
- t
- e
- 1918-1919 autonomy campaign
- Plot of Prats de Molló
- Catalan Republic (1931)
- Events of 6 October
- Operation Garzón
- Fresno Case
- 2009–2011 independence referendums
- 2010 autonomy protest
- 2012 independence demonstration
- 2013 Catalan Way
- 2014 Catalan Way
- 2014 self-determination referendum
- 2015 Free Way
- 2016 We are ready
- 2017–2018 Spanish constitutional crisis
- 2017 National Day for Yes
- 2017 Yes Campaign
- 2017 Operation Anubis
- 2017 independence referendum
- 2017 Catalan general strike
- 2017 Wake Up Europe!
- 2017 Catalan regional election
- 2019 trial of independence leaders
- 2019–2020 protests
- Bases de Manresa (1892)
- Draft Constitution of the Catalan Republic (1928)
- Declaration of Sovereignty (23 Jan 2013)
- White Paper on the National Transition of Catalonia (Sep 2014)
- Initiation of the Process of Independence (9 Nov 2015)
- Let Catalans Vote (May 2017)
- Law on the Referendum on Self-determination (6 Sep 2017)
- Law of juridical transition (8 Sep 2017)
- Catalan declaration of independence (10/27 Oct 2017)
- Valentí Almirall
- Enric Prat de la Riba
- Josep Puig i Cadafalch
- Francesc Macià
- Lluís Companys
- Joan Comorera
- Josep Irla
- Josep Tarradellas
- Jordi Pujol
- Guillem Agulló
- Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira
- Artur Mas
- Oriol Junqueras
- Muriel Casals
- Carme Forcadell
- Jordi Sànchez
- Jordi Cuixart
- Carles Puigdemont
- Roger Torrent
- Anna Gabriel
- Quim Torra
- Elisenda Paluzie
- Pere Aragonès
- Lluís Llach
- Sign † marks defunct organisations.