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NewsJune 19, 2006

BARCELONA, Spain -- The wealthy, semiautonomous Catalonia region gained sweeping new powers Sunday to run its own affairs, according to preliminary results of a historic referendum that some fear could leave Spain's government cash-strapped and powerless...

The Associated Press

BARCELONA, Spain -- The wealthy, semiautonomous Catalonia region gained sweeping new powers Sunday to run its own affairs, according to preliminary results of a historic referendum that some fear could leave Spain's government cash-strapped and powerless.

With nearly 45 percent of the votes counted, 74 percent of voters approved the blueprint and just under 21 percent rejected it, the Catalan government said.

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Turnout was about 48 percent.

The region considers itself a nation within a nation. At stake in the referendum are a bigger slice of tax revenue collected in Catalonia, a say in the appointment of judges and prosecutors to courts run from Madrid and an indirect proclamation of Catalonia as a "nation."

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