Waterloo Region Record

Catalan leaders defiant on independen­ce vote

Pro-independen­ce coalition says the vote will be binding

- Aritz Parra

MADRID — Regional leaders in Catalonia moved Friday to defy the central government in Madrid and go ahead with a vote on independen­ce even though Spain’s constituti­onal court has ordered the vote suspended.

While the pro-independen­ce Catalan government tried to flex its muscles, most of the opposition to the vote — both regional and national — rallied around conservati­ve Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and his efforts to crush the planned Oct. 1 ballot.

On Friday, the state prosecutor targeted members of the Catalan parliament and the Barcelonab­ased regional government in separate lawsuits. The prosecutor’s document asked judges to look into possible disobedien­ce, abuse of power and embezzleme­nt charges against the officials.

But despite the court’s suspension of the vote and the legal threats, regional President Carles Puigdemont has pushed ahead with preparatio­ns for the ballot.

An official website offers volunteers the chance to register and help with the vote. A promotiona­l video asks: “You were born with the ability to choose. Are you going to give it up?”

Officials in the northeaste­rn region claim they have enlisted 560 Catalan town halls to open facilities for the ballot, despite letters sent by Spain’s central authoritie­s to the region’s 947 mayors warning them that their legal duty is to impede the vote. Authoritie­s said similar letters were being sent to public Catalan media organizati­ons and the regional police.

It wasn’t clear what position officials would take in Barcelona, the main city in Catalonia.

Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, an activist against evictions who has become a rising political star, said people should be able to vote as long as there are no liabilitie­s for them or for public servants.

On Friday, the central government’s spokesman, Inigo Mendez de Vigo, clarified that legal actions are targeting “those who organize the vote” and not voters themselves.

The pro-independen­ce coalition ruling Catalonia says the vote will be binding and that if the “yes” side wins it will lead to the independen­ce from Spain by Oct. 3 no matter what the turnout.

Spain’s constituti­onal court has previously ruled that only the national government is allowed to call a referendum on secession and that all Spaniards in the country must have a vote when it comes to sovereignt­y.

On Friday, Rajoy’s cabinet began procedures to strike down a new bill approved overnight by Catalan pro-independen­ce lawmakers. The new law was meant to become Catalonia’s legal framework, or mini-constituti­on, as it transition­s from a Spanish autonomous region to an independen­t republic.

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