Millennium Post

REGION BRACES FOR UNREST OVER DECLARATIO­N OF INDEPENDEN­CE

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BARCELONA: On Monday morning, pupils and parents returned to the Escola Verd primary school in central Girona under a light drizzle, with only some broken metal meshing on a playground wall remaining as evidence of the chillingly brutal police action witnessed here against voters in Sunday’s banned referendum on Catalonia’s future.

Used as a polling station, the school was broken into when riot police attempted to break, enter and seize a ballot box. They then trapped would-be voters in the building and lashed out with their truncheons if anyone tried to escape. “My legs are still shaking,” said one witness some hours afterwards.

Although the police have gone and voting is over, Girona and the wider region of Catalonia are bracing for some more political tension to come this week, as its government prepares to make a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce, while workers will express their anger towards the Madrid government in a general strike starting on Tuesday.

With more than 90 per cent of votes in the banned referendum in favour of secession, Catalan Premier Carles Puigdemont promised the results would be sent to the regional parliament. Catalonia’s referendum law states that within 48 hours of a vote being definitive a declaratio­n of independen­ce has to take place. This may take some time to happen, though, given a small number of postal votes are still coming in and an estimated 770,00 votes went missing during the police raids. Puigdemont did not refer to the declaratio­n again in a Monday press conference.

But for political analysts like Germa Capdevila, head of the editorial board at naciodigit­al.cat, Sunday’s violence has increased the likelihood of Catalonia making the unilateral declaratio­n. He believes that Puigdemont’s hands are tied as a consequenc­e of the heavyhande­d Spanish state police tactics in Sunday’s referendum.

He told The Independen­t: “2.3 million Catalans voted but more than 850 were injured, two of them seriously, so it’s impossible for him to argue now that the referendum has no value.

“How can you tell the people who braved the police charges that their vote doesn’t count because in some polling stations the votes were seized?

“Rajoy and Puigdemont are both victims, in a sense, of their previous stances on the referendum, but after Sunday’s events it is much more likely Puigdemont will make a declaratio­n of independen­ce.”

The earliest most likely date for such a declaratio­n is Wednesday, when the Catalan parliament is next due to be in full session.

Outside Spain, the European Commission went further than it had previously when a spokespers­on said “violence can never be an instrument in politics”. But the bloc has consistent­ly stated that a separate Catalonia would be out of the Union and that it would not intervene in the crisis, a position which remains unchanged despite Sunday’s events.

“The institutio­ns in Europe will continue to support Rajoy,” Capdevila predicted.

“I wouldn’t rule out a situation similar to Lithuania [in the early 1990s] where they were initially in limbo after declaring independen­ce and they weren’t recognised internatio­nally.

“You’d reach the airport, that would be run by the Soviet Union and then five kilometres outside there’d be another passport control with the Lithuanian police.”

Tuesday’s general strike was due to run indefinite­ly this week and was backed by pro-independen­ce organisati­ons and nearly all of Catalonia’s trade unions – including the regional branches of two of Spain’s biggest unions, Comisiones Obreras and UGT. It could prove to be crucial in avoiding such dramatic scenarios as Lithuania’s. A brief mass protest at the police violence at midday on Monday, lasting 10 minutes, received widespread support and a high attendance is expected in the series of walk-outs at schools and factories across the region.

“It is one thing to stop a lot of people voting, but another when companies, particular­ly the foreign ones, see their business getting hurt,” argued Capdevila.

“More pressure from the outside, and that means Europe, business, the trade unions and the multinatio­nals – and there are 4,000 of those in Catalonia – could force Madrid to the negotiatin­g table.” So far, though, Madrid has flatly refused to contemplat­e a fully legal, binding referendum and the right wing of Rajoy’s ruling PP would regard such an action as a sell-out.

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