Kuwait Times

Angry protests in Barcelona as Spain arrest Catalan officials

Ban on referendum by Madrid being ignored

-

Thousands took to the streets of Barcelona yesterday as Spanish police detained 13 Catalan government officials in a crackdown ahead of an independen­ce referendum which Madrid says is illegal. With tensions mounting, separatist organizati­ons called for more people to protest as leaders in the northeaste­rn region pressed ahead with preparatio­ns for the October 1 vote despite Madrid’s ban and a court ruling deeming it unconstitu­tional.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called for calm, urging “a return to normality and a return to common sense because the referendum cannot take place.” But Catalan President Carles Puigdemont accused Madrid of imposing a “de facto” state of emergency to try and stop the referendum. Among those arrested by the Guardia Civil police was Josep Maria Jove, secretary general of economic affairs and Catalonia’s deputy vice president, a regional government spokesman said.

The others work in various Catalan government department­s, including its economic and budget affairs department­s, a local Guardia Civil spokesman said. The reason for the arrests was not immediatel­y clear, but Spain’s central government has warned that officials who help stage the referendum could face criminal charges. Police said they staged 22 search operations.

‘They declared war’

In central Barcelona, thousands of protesters gathered near Jove’s office, many draped in red and yellow Catalan flags, chanting “Independen­ce!” and “We will vote!” Anna Sola, an unemployed 45-year-old, said she rushed out to protest after hearing about Jove’s arrest on the news and through text messages from friends. “They are attacking our institutio­ns, those that we voted for, just for simply doing what the people want,” she said. “It is shameful what is happening in Catalonia, there are no words for it.”

An influentia­l pro-independen­ce citizens’ organizati­on, the Catalan National Assembly (ANC), urged Catalans to hit the streets in protest. “Let’s go out to defend our institutio­ns in a non-violent way. They made a big mistake, we wanted to vote and they declared war,” its president Jordi Sanchez said in a statement.

Threats and seizures

The police operation comes a day after officers seized a trove of documents related to the independen­ce referendum from the offices of Unipost, a private delivery company, in Terrassa near Barcelona. Police said they confiscate­d over 45,000 notificati­ons which were about to be sent to Catalans selected to staff polling stations for the vote, representi­ng 80 percent of the numbers necessary to ensure the stations were adequately staffed. Police scuffled with dozens of pro-secession protesters who gathered outside Unipost’s office to keep officers from entering the building. Madrid has also threatened to arrest mayors who facilitate the vote, has seized posters and fliers that promote the plebiscite and has tightened its control over the region’s finances. It says the constituti­on stipulates that a Spanish region does not have the right to call a referendum.

Tensions have also reached the parliament in Madrid, where Gabriel Rufian, a lawmaker for the pro-separatist Catalan Republican Left (ERC), yesterday told Rajoy to take his “dirty hands off Catalan institutio­ns”. “The will of the Catalan people cannot be stopped. And now we will leave to support our friends,” he added before storming out of the assembly with fellow ERC lawmakers. But Rajoy defended his government’s position, saying it was “fulfilling its obligation.”

Pro-separatist parties captured 47.6 percent of the vote in a September 2015 Catalan election which was billed as a proxy vote on independen­ce, giving them a narrow majority of 72 seats in the 135-seat Catalan parliament. But opinion polls show Catalonia’s roughly 7.5 million residents are deeply divided on independen­ce. A survey commission­ed by the regional government in July showed that 49.4 percent of Catalans were against independen­ce while 41.1 percent were in favor. —AFP

 ??  ?? BARCELONA: People holding ‘Esteladas’ (Catalan pro-independen­ce flags) and a symbolic ballot box at a protest. —AFP
BARCELONA: People holding ‘Esteladas’ (Catalan pro-independen­ce flags) and a symbolic ballot box at a protest. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait