The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘This is not a domestic issue’

Catalonia urges mediation with Spain in secession dispute

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Catalonia’s leader called Monday for internatio­nal mediation and for the European Union “to stop looking the other way” in the region’s bid to secede from Spain, a day after a violent crackdown by Spanish police trying to block an independen­ce referendum left hundreds bruised.

Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont also said a special commission would investigat­e why Spanish police fired rubber bullets, smashed into polling stations and beat protesters with batons Sunday. He urged Spain’s national police reinforcem­ents to leave the northeaste­rn region.

The violence Sunday left more than 890 civilians injured in the melee, two seriously. The Interior Ministry said 39 police received immediate medical treatment and 392 others had scrapes and bruises. Shocking videos showed police dragging people by the hair, kicking them and hitting them with batons.

Puigdemont called for the EU to consider Catalonia’s desire to break away from Spain as a Europe-wide issue and urged Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s government to accept mediation.

“This is not a domestic issue. The need for mediation is evident,” Puigdemont said.

Calls for restraint came from across Europe, including EU chief Donald Tusk, who appealed to Rajoy to “avoid further escalation and use of force” while recognizin­g the independen­ce vote as invalid. Several human rights organizati­ons called for an impartial investigat­ion into the violence.

But Spanish authoritie­s commended the police, saying their response to the voting was profession­al and proportion­ate. And Spain’s interior minister said the 5,000 extra officers deployed to Catalonia would stay as long as necessary.

“I don’t think there was such a heavy hand, but in any case, they had to react,” said Spanish Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis, calling the police reaction videos “a matter of interpreta­tion.”

Speaking in Rome, Dastis said “some of the pictures are real, some of them are not real” but that police had simply responded when people prevented them from doing their job.

Catalan officials say an overwhelmi­ng majority of the 2.26 million who voted supported independen­ce from Spain — they said 90 per cent — but the central government in Madrid has repeatedly condemned the referendum as illegal, unconstitu­tional and invalid.

The Catalan president said Monday the regional parliament will be asked to declare independen­ce in the next few days after final results are announced.

The referendum debacle brought Spain and Catalonia closer to a potentiall­y disastrous showdown as each side said Sunday’s events proved them right and neither looked prepared to cede ground.

Rajoy held meetings with his conservati­ve Popular Party members before seeking a parliament­ary session to discuss how to confront Spain’s most serious political crisis in decades. The prime minister also met with the leaders of the opposition Socialist and Citizens parties to discuss Spain’s options.

The impasse developed after Catalan authoritie­s decided to go ahead with Sunday’s referendum even after Spain’s constituti­onal Court suspended it while assessing the claims by Rajoy’s government that the vote was illegal. The court has previously ruled against unilateral secession attempts.

Riot police turned up in Catalonia on Sunday to prevent people from voting and to confiscate ballot boxes, beating and kicking voters who tried to stop them.

Catalonia’s health services said four injured people remained in the region’s hospitals, two of them in serious condition. On Monday, Spain’s Interior Ministry raised the number of National Police and Civil Guard officers injured from 33 to 431, most of them from kicks, bites and scratches. None were hospitaliz­ed.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said the Spanish police force was “excessive and disproport­ionate” against people “passively resisting” a judge’s order to impede the referendum.

UN human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein called on Spain’s government to ensure “thorough, independen­t and impartial investigat­ions” of the violence.

Some Catalans said both sides bore some responsibi­lity for the mayhem.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A Spanish riot police officer swings a club against would-be voters near a school assigned to be a polling station by the Catalan government in Barcelona, Spain, on Sunday. Catalonia’s leader called Monday for internatio­nal mediation and for the...
AP PHOTO A Spanish riot police officer swings a club against would-be voters near a school assigned to be a polling station by the Catalan government in Barcelona, Spain, on Sunday. Catalonia’s leader called Monday for internatio­nal mediation and for the...

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