South Tyrolean secessionist movement

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Flag of South Tyrol

The South Tyrolean secessionist movement (German: Südtiroler Unabhängigkeitsbewegung) (Italian: Alto Adige movimento di indipendenza) is a political movement in the Italian autonomous province of South Tyrol that calls for the secession of the region from Italy and its reunification with neighboring Austria. Concurrently, some groups favor the establishment of an interim Free State of South Tyrol as a sovereign nation while annexation is organized.[1][2]

History

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The entirety of contemporary South Tyrol came under the jurisdiction of the Austrian Empire in 1814. The popularity of nationalism cast a prominent shadow over Europe following the Napoleonic Wars. In the Kingdom of Italy, the fervor of Italian irredentism was born in 1866. Irredentism entailed the unification of all territories on the Italian peninsula or those perceived to be Italian into a single nation.[3] South Tyrol, given its geographic inclusion in the peninsula, was often the subject of calls for absorption into Italy.

On the onset of the First World War, Italy remained strictly neutral. It was only on April 26, 1915 that the latter nation declared war on the Central Powers. This change in attitude is attributed by historians to the secretive signing of the Treaty of London, which entailed that in exchange for Italy's support the country "shall obtain the Trentino, Cisalpine Tyrol with its geographical and natural frontier (the Brenner frontier)"[4] from the German-aligned Austro-Hungarian Empire. Despite petitions from public officials in South Tyrol and reassurances from United States President Woodrow Wilson that the "readjustment of the frontiers of Italy should be effected along clearly recognizable lines of nationality,"[5][6][7] southern Tyrol and Trentino fell under Italian military administration with the signing of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye in September 1919.[8]

German-Italian tensions

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With the rise to power of Benito Mussolini and Fascism in Italy in 1922 came a strong desire for the Italianization, which essentially sought for the elimination of the German language in speech as well as every day use, such as dual language notices on road signs and advertisements.[9] By the commencement of World War II Italy and Nazi Germany converged to form the Axis Powers. With this came an increase of options for German-speaking citizens, who were now permitted to emigrate into the Greater Germanic Reich with better ease or accept the terms of their Italianization. 86% of South Tyroleans complied with resettlement in other German possessions; while most of the aforementioned emigrants later returned, these policies resulted in the permanent exodus of 75,000 of their populace.[10] Lingual reforms were instated following the Fascist regime's overthrow in 1945, restoring most of the basic rights of South Tyroleans that had been previously revoked.

Autonomy status

South Tyrol was granted the status of an autonomous area by an agreement between the Government of Italy and local officials in 1972.[11] This entailed a much greater level of self-government in the province; the extent of which was a topic of heated debate until a final agreement between the governments of Austria and Italy in the 1992.[12] South Tyrol's designation as a self-governing province grants it an abundance of privileges; for example, of the taxes paid in South Tyrol, only 10% go to the federal government.[1]

Secessionist movement

Bombing campaigns

File:Fuochi Sacro Cuore Monte Pascolo.JPG
Ein Tirol demonstration in 2009.

The earliest post-war activism for South Tyrol's removal from Italy can be found in the South Tyrolean Liberation Committee, which conducted bombings of Italian infrastructure and fascist monuments primarily between the mid-1950s and 1961. The most notable of these incidents was the Night of Fire on June 12, 1961, in which a large electrical supply unit was destroyed via explosives.[13]

Years after the Liberation Committee ceased activity came the Ein Tirol, a far right terrorist organization which followed suit of its predecessor by executing the explosive damage of various relics of Italian fascism as well as historical memorials. Since the mid-1980s the extremist group has taken on a far less prominent and violent role in the independence movement; in 2009 a mountainside overlooking celebrations of the Sacred Heart of Jesus feast was burned in order to spell out the name of the group.[14]

Political solutions

A number of political parties advocating South Tyrol's secession have risen to minor prominence on both the local and national levels, among them the South Tyrolean Freedom, Die Freiheitlichen and Citizens' Union for South Tyrol.[15] These parties encompass 10 of the 35 seats of the South Tylorean Provincial Council, with the autonomist South Tylorean People's Party consistently coming on top of the aforementioned coalition in elections. The movements specific to South Tyrol do not maintain a relationship with the Lega Nord, whose agenda is sometimes dedicated to the establishment of an independent state of Padania in Northern Italy.[16]

Popularity

The manpower and passion with which the calls for South Tyrol's secession are delivered vary by time and political climate.[17] In 1991, unofficial votes indicated that the majority of German-speakers in South Tyrol would favor remaining within Italy.[17] Polls held by the Austrian research institute Karmasin show that 54% of German or Ladin-speaking South Tyroleans would support secession from Italy, while 46% of the total population (including Italians) would encourage South Tyrol's secession.[2]

Reasons for secession

Ethnolingual diversity

Listed below are percentages, obtained via census, of South Tyrol's population based on their first language:[18][19]

Language distribution in 2011
Year German Italian Ladin Others Total Country
1880 90.6 13.4 4.3 1.7 100.0 Austria–Hungary
1890 89.0 14.5 4.3 2.3 100.0 Austria–Hungary
1900 88.8 14.0 4.0 3.2 100.0 Austria–Hungary
1910 89.0 12.9 3.8 4.3 100.0 Austria–Hungary
1921 75.9 10.6 3.9 9.6 100.0 Italy
1961 62.2 34.3 3.4 0.1 100.0 Italy
1971 62.9 33.3 3.7 0.1 100.0 Italy
1981 64.9 28.7 4.1 2.2 100.0 Italy
1991 65.3 26.5 4.2 4.0 100.0 Italy
2001 64.0 24.5 4.0 7.4 100.0 Italy
2011 61.5 23.1 4.0 11.4 100.0 Italy

Tensions over the fair treatment and acknowledgement of minority-language speakers have been a historical justification for separatism, although their protection is cemented by a law passed in November 1991.[17]

Economic situation

South Tyrol is among the wealthiest provinces of Italy[1] with a GDP per capita of €32.000.[20] This being said, Italy is a nation which has suffered unrelenting decline since the birth of the Eurozone crisis in 2009. In 2012 the region was projected to allocate €120 million euros towards stabilizing the national budget of Italy. In order to accomplish this, the region was forced to heighten taxes and fees on crop production, a move which pundits say violates South Tyrol's status as an autonomous region. Eva Klotz, founder and representative of South Tyrolean Freedom in the local parliament, has reflected much of current German-speaking South Tyrolean sentiment in stating that the region "shouldn't be dragged down" with the rest of Italy.[21] This upsurge in separatist fervor thanks to the euro's decline is comparative to the blossoming popularitiy of the Catalan independence movement in Spain.

Relations with Austria

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The treatment and absorption of South Tyrol has often been a source of strain in the foreign relations between Italy and Austria. In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the transitional Austrian government expressed concern for the treatment of German and Ladin ethnic minorities in South Tyrol. This was settled via the signing of Paris Treaty by the two parties on September 5, 1946, outlining a platform for South Tyrol's autonomy and the protection of minorities.[10] However, the changes dictated by the treaty went largely unimplemented, resulting in an Austrian appeal on the situation to the United Nations in 1961.[10] Austria disputed Italy's claims over South Tyrol until the issuing of the aforementioned autonomy package in 1992; in the mid-1990s the Austrian government pleaded with their Italian counterparts to offer amnesty to jailed independence activists, the majority of whom had been engaged in the bombing campaign during the 1950s and 60s.[17] The Freedom Party of Austria has encouraged the distribution of Austrian citizenship to South Tyroleans, although the Austrian government has repeatedly turned down this request.[22]

See also

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References

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  4. Treaty of London; Article 4
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  7. Sterling J. Kernek, "Woodrow Wilson and National Self-Determination along Italy's Frontier: A Study of the Manipulation of Principles in the Pursuit of Political Interests", Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 126, No. 4. (Aug., 1982), pp. 243-300 (246)
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  9. Provvedimenti per l'Alto Adige, in: Gruber, Alfons: Südtirol unter dem Faschismus, Schriftenreihe des Südtiroler Kulturinstitutes 1, Bozen 1974, p. 21f.
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  11. Rolf Steininger: "South Tyrol: A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century", Transaction Publishers, 2003, ISBN 978-0-7658-0800-4, pp.2
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  18. Provincial Statistics Institute of the Autonomous Province of South Tyrol
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  20. Regional GDP per inhabitant in the EU27, 2009
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