Kuwait Times

Police seal off polling stations in Catalonia

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BARCELONA: Police in Catalonia had already sealed over half of the 2,315 polling stations in the region yesterday to stop an independen­ce referendum from taking place, the Spanish government said, as separatist­s remained determined to fight for their right to vote. Teachers, parents, students and activists in this wealthy northeaste­rn region have leapt into action to defend the vote slated for today, defying Madrid’s warnings of repercussi­ons by occupying more than 160 schools designated as polling stations, it said.

Enric Millo, the central government representa­tive in Catalonia, told reporters 1,300 polling stations had already been sealed off. He said that 163 of those had already been occupied when they were sealed off, which meant those inside were allowed to leave but no one could go in. AFP reporters, however, visited several schools occupied by parents, students and locals where people could go in and out freely, indicating there may be more occupied buildings that have yet to be sealed off.

The standoff between the central government and Catalan leaders over an independen­ce referendum opposed by Madrid has morphed into one of the biggest crises to hit Spain since democracy was restored after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975.

As such, it has Spaniards the country over worried. In Spain’s major cities, Madrid, Barcelona, Sevilla, Santander, Alicante, Valencia and Malaga, thousands protested for Spanish unity. “We shouldn’t have got to this point. We’ve arrived at a point of no return,” said Fernando Cepeda, a 58-year-old engineer, a Spanish flag tied around his waist in front of Madrid’s city hall.

Call to remain peaceful

Catalan separatist leaders and organizers of “committees to protect the referendum” stressed that everyone must remain peaceful. In one incident, though, someone fired a pellet gun on Friday night at a group of people standing in front of an occupied high school in the Catalan town of Manlleu, lightly injuring three people, police said.

The referendum has sown divisions among Catalans themselves, with the region deeply split on independen­ce, even if a large majority want to be allowed to settle the matter in a legal vote. Authoritie­s in Madrid have instructed police to ensure no votes are cast in a referendum that the courts have ruled unconstitu­tional. For days, they have been seizing electoral items such as ballot papers while prosecutor­s have ordered the closure of websites linked to the vote and the detention of key members of the team organizing the referendum. But those for the vote have mobilized.

On Friday, tractors paraded through Barcelona, some decked with the “Estelada”, the separatist­s’ flag of red-and-yellow stripes with a white star on a blue chevron. They and firefighte­rs have pledged to protect polling stations. From district to district, people gathered to form “Committees to protect the referendum”, using the Telegram messaging app to get organized and urging everyone to remain peaceful, said an AFP correspond­ent who saw some of the messages. The move appeared to be partly coordinate­d by a platform of “schools open for the referendum.”

Mobilizati­on will continue

Carles Riera, a lawmaker in the regional parliament for the radical CUP party, part of Catalonia’s separatist coalition, vowed that mobilizati­on would continue after today’s vote-if the “yes” camp won but Madrid opposed the result, as is almost certain. “We’re in a process of popular mobilizati­on that is going to last a while,” he told reporters. “This democratic wave, this level of auto-organizati­on will have to keep going for a long time to defend the republic.” On Friday, Spain’s education ministry said in a statement that head teachers in Catalonia “were not exempt from liability” if they cooperated and allowed their schools to remain open for the vote.

Some schools have imagined innovative ways to circumvent an order that public spaces cannot be used for the referendum by organizing leisure activities all over the weekend, from pyjama parties for the kids to volleyball games. Barcelona’s Joan Brossa high school, for instance, advertised a series of activities, including film screenings, football matches and Zumba dance fitness classes. It remained unclear though how people would be able to enter sealed-off schools today to vote, even if they are occupied. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? MADRID: People gather in front of the Cibeles Palace during a demonstrat­ion against independen­ce of Catalonia .
— AFP MADRID: People gather in front of the Cibeles Palace during a demonstrat­ion against independen­ce of Catalonia .

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