Irish Independent

Catalonia facing threat of direct rule from Madrid as crisis grows

- Julien Toyer and Sonya Dowsett

SPAIN’S central government said yesterday it would suspend Catalonia’s autonomy and impose direct rule after the region’s leader threatened to go ahead with a formal declaratio­n of independen­ce if Madrid refused to hold talks.

In a move unpreceden­ted since Spain returned to democracy in the late 1970s, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said he would hold a special cabinet meeting tomorrow that could trigger the move. The socialist opposition said it backed the government but suggested the measures should be limited in scope and time.

Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, ignoring a 10am deadline to drop his secession campaign, wrote a letter to Mr Rajoy threatenin­g a formal declaratio­n of independen­ce.

The war of words increased uncertaint­y over a standoff that has raised fears of social unrest, cut growth prospects for the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy and rattled the euro.

“If the government continues to impede dialogue and continues with the repression, the Catalan parliament could proceed, if it is considered opportune, to vote on a formal declaratio­n of independen­ce,” Mr Puigdemont said.

Catalonia, which has a distinctiv­e culture and language, triggered Spain’s biggest political crisis for decades with a secession bid it put to a referendum on October 1. Only 43pc of voters participat­ed but those who did voted overwhelmi­ngly to secede, while opponents of secession mostly stayed home.

Spanish courts have ruled the referendum illegal, but Mr Puigdemont says the result is binding and must be obeyed.

The regional authoritie­s have not made clear how and when a declaratio­n of independen­ce would take place and whether it would be endorsed by the regional assembly. Some pro-independen­ce lawmakers have said they want to hold a vote in the Catalan parliament to lend it a more solemn character.

Mr Rajoy plans to invoke Article 155 of the 1978 constituti­on, which allows him to take control of a region if it breaks the law.

A senior government source said the exact measures would be agreed tomorrow and probably voted through the upper house Senate on October 30, giving the secessioni­sts a few days of leeway to respond before Madrid takes control.

The regional authoritie­s could use that time to split unilateral­ly, call elections in the hope of strengthen­ing their mandate, or back down, although this is seen as highly unlikely.

“From the moment the measures are known, the regional government knows what’s going to happen and has a period of time to act until 155 can be acted upon,” the source said.

Spanish stocks, bonds and the euro all suffered in early trade, but recovered, a bounce some strategist­s attributed to a sense that Madrid had the upper hand in the standoff.

The terms of Article 155 are vague and could spur more wrangling with the restive region.

“The government will use all the tools available to restore as soon as possible the law and the constituti­onal order, recover peaceful cohabitati­on between citizens and stop the economic damage that the legal uncertaint­y is creating,” government spokesman Inigo Mendez de Vigo said in a statement.

Mr Rajoy’s team met members of the socialist party to co-ordinate their next steps. A spokesman for the socialists said while they fully stood behind the government they would insist Article 155 is applied in the most proportion­ate way.

Madrid’s options range from closing down the regional parliament and expelling lawmakers, to a softer and more targeted approach, the government source said.

Theoretica­lly, the central administra­tion could take control of the region’s finances and police, and could call a snap election.

But some members of the Catalan government have already questioned this interpreta­tion of the constituti­on, suggesting the standoff could extend for at least several more days.

Carles Riera, a lawmaker from the pro-independen­ce CUP party whose 10 deputies are vital to Mr Puigdemont’s coalition, said dialogue with the Spanish state now looked impossible, and called on the leader to formalise a declaratio­n of independen­ce.

“From our point of view, the sooner this happens the better,” Mr Riera told reporters in the Catalan capital Barcelona.

Impatience is also setting in among residents of the port city.

A 55-year-old market trader, who voted for secession in the referendum, said she was tired of the political to-and-fro.

“People want a resolution. Go for one thing or the other, but leave people in peace to carry on with their routine and their work,” she said, rearrangin­g lettuces on her market stall.

Mr Rajoy says the Catalan government has repeatedly broken the law.

 ??  ?? Catalan autonomous police officers, known as Mosso d’Esquadra, during a protest in Barcelona called by pro-independen­ce supporters against the arrest of two Catalan separatist­s
Catalan autonomous police officers, known as Mosso d’Esquadra, during a protest in Barcelona called by pro-independen­ce supporters against the arrest of two Catalan separatist­s
 ??  ?? Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy
Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy

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