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After bitter in-fighting, Catalonia's separatists to form govt

The focus of in-fighting was Artur Mas, the incumbent, separatist regional president whom the far-left CUP party -- part of the secessionist faction that won the elections -- rejected over his support for austerity and corruption scandals linked to his party.

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Incoming Catalan President Carles Puigdemont delivers a speech during the investiture session at the Catalunya Parliament in Barcelona, Spain, January 10, 2016.
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After months of in-fighting, Catalonia's separatists are finally set to vote in a new regional president on Sunday, paving the way for a secessionist government that aims to declare independence from Spain by next year.

The fate of Catalonia's high-profile secessionist movement had hung in the balance since regional, parliamentary elections in September, as the pro-independence faction that won the polls bickered bitterly over who should lead the new local government.

The focus of in-fighting was Artur Mas, the incumbent, separatist regional president whom the far-left CUP party -- part of the secessionist faction that won the elections -- rejected over his support for austerity and corruption scandals linked to his party.

With Mas stubbornly refusing to step aside as a weekend deadline to form a government approached dangerously close, Catalonia appeared to be heading for fresh elections -- which would have been the fourth since 2010. But at the last minute, Mas unexpectedly agreed to step aside on Saturday, naming relatively unknown journalist and politician Carles Puigdemont as his successor and thus resolving the deadlock.

On Sunday evening, separatist members of the regional parliament will confirm the selection of Puigdemont, a Catalan-language journalist from Mas's party. The 53-year-old mayor of Girona, which lies some 100 kilometres northeast of Barcelona, will then appoint his cabinet.

"Our project is solid and working in the right direction," Puigdemont tweeted after the last-minute agreement, as the separatists gather their forces again to take the fight back to Madrid, where the national government is in limbo following inconclusive December polls.

Incumbent Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's conservative Popular Party (PP) came top in the December 20 elections but lost its absolute majority, leaving him struggling to form a government. So far both the PP's traditional Socialist rivals (PSOE), who came second in the elections, and upstart anti-austerity party Podemos have refused to support him.

"The (separatist) coalition is profiting from the power vacuum in Madrid," headlined online daily El Espanol on Sunday.

Faced with the prospect of secession by Spain's richest region, Rajoy insisted Saturday that the country's next national government should have "an ample parliamentary base with the stability and capacity to face the separatist challenge". 

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