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Barcelona rocked by violence on fifth day of separatist protests

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BARCELONA, (Reuters) - Hundreds of protesters battled police in the heart of Barcelona yesterday, setting up fiery barricades and hurling rocks at security forces on the fifth day of unrest following the jailing of Catalan separatist leaders.

The violence followed a largely peaceful demonstrat­ion which drew more than half a million people onto the streets of the Catalan capital to denounce the lengthy jail terms that have sent a shockwave through Spanish politics.

As night fell, masked youths blocked a broad boulevard close to the city’s police headquarte­rs, setting fire to large garbage bins and throwing a hail of stones, cans and bottles towards massed lines of security forces in full riot gear.

Blazing obstacles and metal barriers were thrown up across other streets in one of Europe’s tourist hotspots and a branch of the Banco

Santander bank was ransacked. Police responded with repeated volleys of foam bullets, smoke grenades and tear gas, which covered the area in thick, choking smoke. A water canon roamed the area, its prime task being to douse the flames rather than chase off rioters.

Officials said there were clashes in at least four other towns and cities in Catalonia, Spain’s wealthiest region in the far northeast of the country, as the pro-independen­ce anger showed no sign of abating.

Health authoritie­s said 62 people were hurt in the confrontat­ions, including 41 in Barcelona. Television showed a policeman being carried away by colleagues after being knocked unconsciou­s. It was not clear if he was in a serious condition.

Spain’s acting interior minister, Fernando Grande-Marlaska, said 207 police had been injured since Monday, with 107 police vehicles damaged and 800 bins burned.

Some 128 people have been arrested in the region over the past five days and Grande-Marlaska warned that the rioters faced up to six years in prison.

It is the worst such unrest Spain has seen in decades and the interior ministry sent police reinforcem­ents to Barcelona to try to quell the escalating chaos.

“This kind of violence is unpreceden­ted in Catalonia ... these people are not separatist­s,” Miquel Buch, the Catalan interior affairs chief and a member of a pro-independen­ce party, told the TV 3 channel.

The day started with hundreds of thousands of people from across the region pouring into Barcelona to protest against the verdict by Spain’s Supreme Court, which sentenced nine separatist­s to prison over a failed, 2017 secessioni­st bid.

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