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Movement for the Independence of Sicily Movimento per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | MIS |
| Leader | Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile |
| Founded | 10 July 1943 (1943-07-10) |
| Dissolved | 4 June 1951 (1951-06-04) |
| Headquarters | Palermo |
| Ideology | Sicilian nationalism Separatism Regionalism |
| Party flag | |
TheMovement for the Independence of Sicily (Italian:Movimento per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia,Sicilian:Muvimentu pâ Nnipinnenza dâ Sicilia, MIS) was aseparatistSicilianpolitical party originally active inSicily from 1943 to 1951. Its best electoral result was in 1947, when it won 8.8% of the votes in the Sicilian regional election and had nine regional deputies elected.
The party was supported by Sicilians from a very wide of political stances: bothconservatives andsocialists were involved at some point. The purpose was first to gain independence for Sicily. Once this was accomplished MIS planned to sort out the politics of the island themselves, with the movement splintering to found new Sicilian political parties with their own personal stances.
The movement was founded in September 1942 asCommittee for the Independence of Sicily (Comitato per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia,CIS) finding inspiration in theSicilian Vespers, withAndrea Finocchiaro Aprile serving as its first president. The movement included members of very different political views, such as revolutionarysocialistAntonio Canepa,social-democratGiovanni Guarino Amella, right-wing people, most of them aristocrats, such as baronLucio Tasca and dukeGuglielmo Paternò, and members with close ties tothe Mafia, as well as outright Mafiosi such asCalogero Vizzini.The movement gained presence and support following theArmistice of Cassibile of 8 September 1943, which forced Italy to abandon the island, while the U.S. troops still were on the verge of completing themilitary occupation of Sicily. In October 1943, Finocchiaro Aprile asked the King of ItalyVictor Emmanuel III to abdicate, and successively gained support to his cause from about ten Sicilian deputies. In the spring of 1944, the CIS was disbanded and the Movement for the Independence of Sicily (MIS) was founded. During those days, theAllies prohibited any kind of political activity, but tolerated the existence of the MIS. Several politicians with strong ties with the Mafia, such asCalogero Vizzini andCalogero Volpe, joined the MIS; however, all of them soon later left the MIS in order to join the newborn Italian parties, such as theChristian Democracy.
In the fall of 1944, during the first congress held inTaormina, the MIS decided to arm itself under pushes from its more radical members. The EVIS (Esercito Volontario per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia, Volunteer Army for the Independence of Sicily) was founded, and its operations led the Italian central government to send its troops in Sicily. On 17 June 1945, following an armed clash with theCarabinieri, Antonio Canepa, head of the EVIS, was murdered.[1]
After the end ofWorld War II, a special council started working on aspecial autonomy statute for Sicily, which was approved by KingUmberto II of Italy on 15 May 1946, and was finally approved by the Italian parliament on 26 February 1948. The banditSalvatore Giuliano joined it.
In the1946 general election, MIS obtained 0.7% of national votes (8.8% of votes in Sicily), and four seats, including its leader Finocchiaro Aprile. During the 1947 congress,Antonino Varvaro, former secretary and leading member of the left wing, was expelled from the party by a majority. The reasons remained unknown. Following these events, Varvaro founded a rival independentist movement, MISDR, which did not achieve much success and disbanded soon. In the first Sicilian elections held in 1947, MIS obtained about 9% of votes, and eight seats. However, the movement lost all its seats following the1948 general election and the 1951 regional election. Soon after the latter, Finocchiaro Aprile and several other members resigned from MIS and the movement entered into a sort of political hiatus, never being formally disbanded.
The Sicilian independence movement continued to live thanks to Rosario Fasanaro, historical independence pioneer of the movement inCatania, then Regional Secretary until 27 January 2004, the year of his death.
On 22 April 2004 an association was formed calledmovimento per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia, which refers directly to the experience of the MIS of the 1940s. On 11 May 2009, during a press conference, the leaders ofthe Movement gave the honorary member card to the then President of the Sicilian RegionRaffaele Lombardo the following motivation: "For having placed himself at the service of the "autonomist cause" and for helping to awaken the identity and pride of theSicilian People", fearing the hypothesis of an alliance with the Movement for Autonomies, of which Lombardo himself is the leader. Alliance that has not been followed.
In November 2016, a new name was created,Movimento Nazionale Siciliano, between three Sicilian groups:Movimento per l'Indipendenza della Sicilia,Fronte Nazionale Siciliano, andSicilia Nazione in these elections, but which did not present its own lists in the regional elections of November 2017.
The independentist Massimo Cirano, belonging to the "Archimedes Section" of the MIS presented himself in April 2019, with his symbol and list, to the administrative authorities ofthe municipality of Bagheria obtaining 1160 votes.
| Election | Leader | Constituent Assembly | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Position | ||
| 1946 | Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile | 171,201 | 0.7 | 4 / 556 | ||
| Election | Leader | Sicilian Regional Assembly | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Position | ||
| 1947 | Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile | 171,470 | 8.8 | 9 / 90 | ||