The Asian Age

Catalonia protests after key separatist­s detained

Cops were trapped for hours, their vehicles vandalised

- MARIANNE BARRIAUX & KATY LEE

Thousands of people took to the streets of Catalonia Tuesday after a judge ordered the detention of two separatist leaders, further inflaming tensions over the region’s chaotic referendum on splitting from Spain.

Thousands of workers in Barcelona and other cities staged a brief walkout at noon in protest at Monday’s move by the National Court in Madrid to keep Jordi Cuixart and Jordi Sanchez behind bars on sedition charges.

“Repression is not the solution,” protesters shouted as hundreds gathered outside the Catalan regional government offices in central Barcelona.

“Now anyone can be put in jail,” said Carme Guell, a 62-year-old beautician who joined the walkout as civil servants from nearby regional ministries blocked the street.

Like many who back independen­ce for semiautono­mous Catalonia — which is profoundly divided on the issue — Guell said the wealthy northeaste­rn region was “treated like a colony. All our money is taken away, nothing is reinvested here.”

Catalonia’s separatist government sparked Spain’s worst political crisis in decades by holding a banned independen­ce referendum on October 1, when a violent crackdown on voters by national police shocked the world.

As the standoff shows little sign of easing, Madrid announced late Monday that it was cutting its growth forecast for next year from 2.6 to 2.3 percent.

The prolonged uncertaint­y has rattled the stock markets, while nearly 700 companies have moved their legal headquarte­rs out of Catalonia, according to official figures released Tuesday.

Further protests against the detention of Cuixart and Sanchez were planned for Tuesday afternoon in front of central government offices in Barcelona, Gerona, Tarragona and Lleida, with a candle-lit protest in Barcelona at 8:00 pm.

The pair nicknamed the “two Jordis” are the leaders of pro-independen­ce citizens’ groups Omnium Cultural and the Catalan National Assembly (ANC) respective­ly, both of which count tens of thousands of members and have emerged as influentia­l players in the crisis.

They are accused of encouragin­g a major protest last month as Spanish police raided the Catalan administra­tion’s offices in the run-up to the referendum.

Police officers were trapped for hours and their vehicles vandalised as protesters ringed the building, with Cuixart and Sanchez standing atop a police car calling for “permanent mobilisati­on” against the Spanish state.

The crime of sedition can carry up to 15 years in prison.

“If you’re watching this video, it’s because the state has decided to deny me my freedom,” Cuixart said in a message recorded before the court decision, adding that his organisati­on would work “undergroun­d” if necessary.

Though she opposes the current drive for independen­ce, Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau blasted the move to detain Sanchez and Cuixart, who she said were being held as “political prisoners”.

“The existence of political prisoners has no place in the current EU,” she said, announcing the city council would halt meetings for two days in protest.

Catalan police Josep Lluis has also been charged with sedition for allegedly failing to stop the referendum.

 ?? — AP ?? People protest the court’s decision to imprison civil society leaders without bail, in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday. Protesters were gathering for a fresh round of demonstrat­ions to demand the release of two leaders of Catalonia’s pro-independen­ce...
— AP People protest the court’s decision to imprison civil society leaders without bail, in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday. Protesters were gathering for a fresh round of demonstrat­ions to demand the release of two leaders of Catalonia’s pro-independen­ce...

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