The Phnom Penh Post

Madrid to block Catalan vote

- Michaela Cancela-Kieffer and Daniel Bosque

SPANISH Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy vowed yesterday to take legal action to block an independen­ce referendum in Catalonia which he branded an “intolerabl­e act of disobedien­ce”.

Rajoy gathered his cabinet for an emergency meeting to formally ask Spain’s Constituti­onal Court to once again rule against the plebiscite called for October 1. He also said all municipali­ties in Catalonia would be warned over their “obligation to impede or paralyse” efforts to carry out the vote which he said is unconstitu­tional.

Catalonia’s regional parliament, controlled by separatist­s, voted on Wednesday to push ahead with the referendum in the wealthy northeaste­rn region which includes Barcelona, sparking the country’s deepest political crisis in 40 years.

The Catalan parliament was to meet again later yesterday to examine a “transition law” laying out how the region would function if the majority of its 7.5 million inhabitant­s vote in favour of seceding from Spain.

Spain’s top prosecutor meanwhile said “criminal charges are being prepared” against the leaders of the Catalan parliament as well as officials in the regional government who prepared the referendum decree and that voting materials would be seized.

General prosecutor Jose Manuel Maza told reporters the officials could be charged, among other things, with dis- obedience, abuse of power and embezzleme­nt.

‘Covert state of siege’

Maza added regional prosecutor­s, assisted by police, had been told to investigat­e any actions taken to organise the vote.

The warnings were brushed aside by a Catalan government spokesman, who insisted the referendum would take place despite a “covert state of siege” being imposed by the central government in Madrid.

“Whether it’s snowy or windy, we will do it because we have a contract with the citizens of Catalonia,” Jordi Turull said.

“This does nothing to alter the government’s project,” he added. “Faced with this covert state of siege, we now feel obliged to defend our most fundamenta­l rights.”

Catalonia’s President Carles Puigdemont, a lifelong proponent on independen­ce, is hoping to mobilise supporters in a show of legitimacy in the face of Madrid’s threats to halt the vote by any means possible.

Tens of thousands of Catalans are expected to take to the streets of Barcelona on Monday, Catalonia’s national day, to push for independen­ce as they have in previous years on this date.

The looming showdown was set up late Wednesday after lawmakers approved the referendum with 72 votes in favour and 11 abstention­s after 12 hours of often stormy debate in the regional assembly.

After the law was passed, separatist lawmakers sang the Catalan anthem, Els Segadors, which recalls a 1640 revolt in the region against the Spanish monarchy.

‘Lost all legitimacy’

In a tweet Wednesday, Catalan parliament president Carme Forcadell said she had requested that the 12 judges at the Constituti­onal Court be disqualifi­ed, calling them “another extension of the state which has lost all legitimacy”.

Most of the court’s judges have been nominated by lawmakers from Rajoy’s Popular Party. The court yesterday dismissed her request.

Catalonia accounts for about one-fifth of Spain’s economic output, and already has significan­t powers over matters such as education and health care.

But Spain’s economic worries, coupled with a perception that the region pays more in taxes than it receives in investment­s and transfers from Madrid, have helped push the cause of secession from the fringes of Catalan politics to centre stage.

Adding to the rise in separatist sentiment was a 2010 ruling by the Constituti­onal Court striking down parts of a 2006 autonomy charter which granted new powers to Catalonia and recognised it as “a nation”.

Opinion polls show that Catalans are evenly divided on independen­ce. But over 70 percent want a referendum to take place to settle the matter, similar to the plebiscite held in Scotland in 2014.

The Catalan government staged a symbolic independen­ce referendum in 2014, when more than 80 percent of participan­ts voted to split from Spain – though only 2.3 million of Catalonia’s 5.4 million eligible voters took part.

Spain’s Court of Auditors ruled on Tuesday that 11 former Catalan officials, including former Catalan president Artur Mas, must repay by September 25 the 5.1 million ($6.1 million) in public funds that it cost to hold that vote.

 ?? JOSEP LAGO/AFP ?? People wave Catalan flags as they gather during a pro-independen­ce demonstrat­ion, on September 11, 2016, in Bracelona.
JOSEP LAGO/AFP People wave Catalan flags as they gather during a pro-independen­ce demonstrat­ion, on September 11, 2016, in Bracelona.

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