"The poll will
not be held," Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon told journalists
moments after Catalonia's President, Artur Mas, announced a deal.
Mr Mas said agreement
had been reached on the date and on two questions.
Voters would be asked
if they wanted Catalonia to be a state and if they wanted it to be an
independent state.
Mr Mas announced that
an agreement had been reached in principle and had still to be approved
formally by the parties internally.
Both Spain's ruling
conservatives, the Popular Party of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, and the
Socialist opposition have long made it clear that they oppose a referendum.
Under the current
Spanish constitution, referendums can only be called by the national government
in Madrid, not by the governments of Spain's 17 autonomous communities, of
which Catalonia is one, the BBC's Tom Burridge reports from Madrid.
Mr Mas has said that
"there is time to comply with laws and democratic processes".
But for that to
happen, Spain's national parliament would need to approve a change in the
Spanish constitution before next November, and that looks impossible given the
opposition in Madrid, our correspondent adds.
Catalonia is one of
Spain's most developed regions, with a population of 7.5 million.
It already has a wide
degree of autonomy but the recent economic crisis has fuelled Catalan
nationalism.
In September
supporters of independence formed a human chain across the region.
Mr Mas has previously
said that if Madrid blocks a referendum, he will turn regional elections - due
in 2016 - into a vote on independence.
Opinion polls suggest
Catalans are evenly split over independence.
The EU and Nato have
warned that Catalonia would be excluded if it broke away from Spain.
Nationalists in
another Spanish region, the Basque Country, won regional elections there last
year.
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