The Phnom Penh Post

Catalonia leader says region has ‘won the right’ to secede

- Marianne Barriaux and Daniel Silva

CATALONIA’S leader Carles Puigdemont said the region had won the right to break away from Spain after 90 percent of voters taking part in a banned referendum voted for independen­ce, defying a sometimes violent police crackdown and fierce opposition from Madrid.

His declaratio­n appeared to set the restive region on course for a deeper split with the Spanish government, after Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy reiterated his government’s position that the vote was an illegal act, to which the state had reacted “with firmness and serenity”.

Any attempt to unilateral­ly declare independen­ce is almost certain to be opposed not just by Madrid but also by a large section of the Catalan population, which is deeply split on the issue.

The regional government said 2.26 million people actually took part in Sunday’s referendum, or 42.3 percent of the electorate.

A jubilant Puigdemont said his people had “won the right to an independen­t state” and urged the European Union to stop looking “the other way”.

Puigdemont has said that in the event of a “yes” victory he would declare independen­ce for Catalonia, which accounts for 19 percent of Spain’s economic output.

At least 92 people were confirmed injured out of a total of 844 who needed medical attention, Catalan authoritie­s said.

Further adding to tensions, unions and Catalan associatio­ns called a region-wide strike for today due to “the grave violation of rights and freedoms”, urging people to take to the streets.

Helmeted police armed with batons moved in en masse early Sunday to seal off polling stations and seize ballot boxes, sparking clashes.

Videos posted on social media showed police dragging voters from polling stations by their hair, throwing people down stairs and attacking Catalan firefighte­rs protecting polling stations.

The Interior Ministry said 33 police required treatment.

Rajoy declared the plebiscite had been blocked, and called the vote a process that “only served to sow division, push citizens to confrontat­ion and the streets to revolt”, but left the door potentiall­y open to negotiatio­ns on greater autonomy for the region.

The referendum was organised under the threat of reprisals and criminal charges but thousands of Catalans stood in defiance of the central government crying “Votarem” – “We will vote”.

Puigdemont said in an ad- dress after polls closed: “With this day of hope and suffering, the citizens of Catalonia have won the right to an independen­t state in the form of a republic.”

Camped inside overnight

The referendum law foresees a declaratio­n of independen­ce soon after a “yes” vote, but it remains unclear if the regional government will actually do so.

Even before the vote, judicial officials ordered police to seize ballot papers, detain key organisers and shut down websites promoting the referendum after Madrid and the courts deemed it unconstitu­tional.

Thousands of people had gathered outside polling stations before dawn, joining those who had spent the night camped inside to ensure they would be open on the day.

In central Barcelona, riot police charged at demonstrat­ors who were sitting on the ground at a polling station, and fired rubber bullets, witnesses said.

‘Unjustifie­d violence’

Riot police also stormed a polling station near Girona, smashing the glass doors of the sports centre where Puigdemont was due to vote and cutting a chain to force their way in. But Puigdemont managed to vote anyway in nearby Cornella del Terri.

But in several areas, voting was peaceful.

Under a sea of umbrellas outside a school in Barcelona, a crowd gathered, among them elderly people in wheelchair­s, families with baby carriages and parents clutching toddlers by the hand.

With no police in sight, they were able to cast their ballots, prompting scenes of jubilation.

“That’s the great hope, to be able to vote freely like this despite the problems we’ve faced, I’m very happy. I can die peacefully,” said Jose Mas Ribas, 79.

Although Catalans are divided over independen­ce, most want to vote on the matter in a legal and binding plebiscite.

Catalonia already has significan­t control over education, healthcare and welfare, but the region says it pays more in taxes than it receives from Madrid.

 ?? PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/AFP ?? A woman with her mouth covered with duct tape holds a Catalan pro-independen­ce flag during a demonstrat­ion in Barcelona yesterday a day after hundreds were injured in a police crackdown during Catalonia’s banned independen­ce referendum.
PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/AFP A woman with her mouth covered with duct tape holds a Catalan pro-independen­ce flag during a demonstrat­ion in Barcelona yesterday a day after hundreds were injured in a police crackdown during Catalonia’s banned independen­ce referendum.

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