The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Catalan officials mull independen­ce

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Catalonia’s regional government on Wednesday mulled when to declare the region’s independen­ce from Spain, with some lawmakers saying it would happen Monday. Spanish stocks sank as the country grappled with its most serious national crisis in decades.

Catalan president Carles Puigdemont again urged the government to accept mediation in the political deadlock between Spain’s authoritie­s and the leaders of the wealthy northeaste­rn region of some 7.5 million.

The yearslong tension peaked on Sunday when police used force to disperse voters in a referendum that Spain’s constituti­onal Court had ordered shelves while assessing its legality.

Politician­s in other parts of Spain and a handful of civil groups have offered to try to bridge the divide between the two sides, but Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy says no dialogue can take place outside of the country’s constituti­on, which doesn’t include provisions for a region to secede.

“Mr. Puigdemont has been outside of the law for way too long,” Rajoy’s deputy, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria, said, responding to the remarks Puigdemont made in a televised address late on Wednesday.

European leaders have sided with Spain and, amid fears that Catalonia’s secession bid could find echoes elsewhere on the continent, the European Union has so far refused to step in.

European Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans stressed on Wednesday the need for Spain and Catalonia to talk with each other, but said there is a “general consensus that regional government of Catalonia has chosen to ignore the law when organizing the referendum.”

Puigdemont will address the regional parliament Monday to review the disputed vote — a session that his parliament­ary supporters in the radical CUP group say they will consider the independen­ce declaratio­n. “We held the referendum amid unpreceden­ted repression and in the following days we will show our best face to apply the results of the referendum,” Puigdemont said on Wednesday.

His televised address mirrored a speech 24 hours earlier by Spanish King Felipe VI.

Accusing him of following Rajoy’s “catastroph­ic” policies toward Catalonia, Puigdemont addressed the king directly, telling him: “You have disappoint­ed many Catalans.”

Rajoy’s conservati­ve government has declared the referendum illegal and invalid, and pledged to respond with “all necessary measures” to counter Catalan defiance, without revealing how it intends to do so.

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