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Thousands march for Scottish independence

October 5, 2019

A 2014 referendum saw 55% of voters opposing Scottish independence, but nationalists argue that the 2016 UK referendum in favor of Brexit calls for another vote. In Scotland, 62% voted to stay in the EU.

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Pro-independence activists wave Scottish Saltire flags as they march from Holyrood to the Meadows in Edinburgh on October 5, 2019
Image: Getty Images/AFP/A. Buchanan

Calls for a fresh independence referendum are getting louder in Scotland just weeks before a possible British exit from the European Union. On Saturday, thousands of people participated in a pro-independence rally in Edinburgh.

Read more: Scotland wants to avoid Brexit but doesn't know how

Demonstrators were carrying Scottish flags, some wearing kilts and playing bagpipes, as they began their rally from Holyrood Park in the Scottish capital.

Organizers of the march said hundreds of thousands of people took part in the event. Police estimates were not immediately available. 

Joanna Cherry, a Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP) lawmaker, was one of the prominent rally participants. Cherry was behind the successful legal challenge to Prime Minister Boris Johnson's decision to prorogue Parliament in September. She was also one of the lawmakers that voted in favor of a law to force Johnson to ask the EU for more time to avoid leaving the 28-nation bloc without a deal.

Read more: Brexit poses existential questions for Scottish nationalists 

Scotland: Exit from Brexit?

Calls for fresh referendum

Nationalists in Scotland are demanding a new independence referendum from Britain. Although Scotland voted against independence in 2014, pro-independence groups say the fact that 62% of Scots voted in favor of staying in the EU in the 2016 Brexit referendum shows that Scotland no longer wants to stay with Britain as it leaves the EU.

Read more: UK is 'making a mess' of Brexit, Scotland's Nicola Sturgeon tells DW

Nationalists have argued that some people voted against Scottish independence thinking it would guarantee their place inside the EU.

Nicola Sturgeon, first minister and leader of the SNP, argued that Brexit will devastate Scotland's economy. Sturgeon has lent her support for a second independence referendum in 2021.

Read more: Scotland to open Berlin office to boost trade after Brexit

A few pro-Union protesters held a counterdemonstration, carrying Union Jack flags.

Nicola Sturgeon interview

shs/sms  (AFP, dpa)

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