Sunday, October 26, 2025

Unveiling Tomorrow's Cameroon Through Today's News

Breaking

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has left the door open for Spanish champions Barcelona to play in the French league if Catalonia were to become independent from Spain. Pro-independence parties warned that current European champions Barcelona would not be able to play in Spain's La Liga under current Spanish law if Catalonia became independent.

Valls was questioned about the issue in an interview with French political magazine Challenges. He cited the example of AS Monaco—a club which comes under the jurisdiction of the independent principality rather than France—as a blueprint for Barcelona's possible participation in France's Ligue 1. "After all, Monaco plays in it," said Valls when asked about whether Barcelona could join the French league. The prime minister, who was born in the Catalan capital, is a lifelong Barcelona fan.

In an interview with French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche in June, Valls said: "I am a football enthusiast, for Barca. This is connected to my family, the French know it, they speak to me about it in the street." With star players Forbes, Barcelona are worth $3.16 billion, making them the world's second most valuable football team in the world behind arch-rivals Real Madrid.

Tebas admitted that Barcelona leaving La Liga would severely damage the Spanish league's reputation. "I can't imagine the LFP without Barca. In the same way as I can't imagine Catalonia without Spain, I can't see La Liga without Barca," he said. Former Barcelona manager and captain Pep Guardiola, who currently manages German champions Bayern Munich, fined by UEFA in recent months for allowing fans to display flags supporting Catalan independence at matches.