Kuwait Times

Catalan strike severs road links as secessioni­st leaders regroup

Leaders face uphill task to regain political momentum

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BARCELONA: A general strike called by pro-independen­ce campaigner­s in Catalonia severed transport links yesterday, as leaders of its secessioni­st movement sought to regain political momentum after failing to agree a joint ticket to contest an election. Protesters shut down roads, causing huge tailbacks into Barcelona, and some public transport ran minimum services in response to calls for action by two civic groups-whose heads were imprisoned last month on sedition charges-and a labor union.

People stood across dozens of major highways in the region waving placards and chanting “freedom for political prisoners”, TV and video images showed, while minor scuffles were reported on social media as police attempted to move protesters. While many smaller stores left their shutters closed, most larger shops and businesses in the region appeared to be open as normal. An uphill task awaited the political heavyweigh­ts of the independen­ce campaign, whose parties jointly ran Catalonia for the last two years until Madrid sacked the region’s government in response to its independen­ce push.

Deposed Catalan president Carles Puigdemont’s centrerigh­t PDeCAT and the leftist ERC of former regional vice president Oriol Junqueras had until midnight on Tuesday to agree a new pact, but they failed to meet that deadline, meaning they will contest the Dec. 21 vote as separate parties. The central government in Madrid called the election last month after assuming control of Catalonia following its parliament’s unilateral independen­ce declaratio­n. Puigdemont is in self-imposed exile in Belgium, while Junqueras is in custody on charges of sedition, rebellion and misuse of public funds.

‘Juncker won’t meet me’ Puigdemont, who faces the same charges and is the subject of a extraditio­n request from Madrid, had ambitions to garner support for his independen­ce campaign in the heartland of the European Union. But that hope has fallen flat, and in an interview published yesterday he renewed criticism of the bloc’s executive. “(EU Commission President Jean-Claude) Juncker welcomes mayors, governors ... but he doesn’t want to meet me,” Puigdemont told Belgian Daily De Standaard. “I’ve always been a convinced European ... But the people who are running the EU now, are wrecking Europe ... The gap between the Europe of the people and the official Europe is increasing.”

Catalonia’s secessioni­st push has plunged Spain into its worst political crisis in four decades, triggered a business exodus and reopened old wounds from the country’s civil war in the 1930s. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who has been unwavering in his opposition to any form of independen­ce for Catalonia, said he hoped next month’s election would usher in “a period of calm” and business as usual for the region. “I’m hoping for massive participat­ion in the election.. and, after that, we’ll return to normality,” he said in the Madrid parliament building yesterday.

An opinion poll released on Sunday by Barcelonab­ased newspaper La Vanguardia showed Junqueras’ ERC could garner between 45 and 46 seats in Catalonia’s 135-strong regional assembly while Puigdemont’s PdeCat would win just 14 or 15. In order to reach the 68-seat threshold for a majority, they would then have to form a parliament­ary alliance with anti-capitalist

Travel chaos as Catalans demand leaders’ release

CUP. ERC and PDeCAT could still reach an agreement after the vote, but by standing together they could have held more seats, polls and projection­s from the 2015 election results showed.

Economy Minister Luis de Guindos told a banking conference in Madrid he hoped the election would revive the Catalan success story “during which it has enjoyed great economic and cultural prosperity together with a high level of self-governance.” For some Catalans who ignored yesterday’s strike-called by the CSC union and supported by civic groups Asamblea Nacional Catalana (ANC) and Omnium Cultural - that moment is already overdue. “Why should I strike, nobody is going to raise my salary. In this world we have to work and not argue so much,” Jose Luis, a constructi­on worker, told Reuters TV as he walked through Barcelona on his way to work. “The politician­s should work more and stop their silliness.”

 ?? —AFP ?? BARCELONA: Protesters block train tracks at the Sants Station in Barcelona during a strike called by a proindepen­dence union in Catalonia yesterday.
—AFP BARCELONA: Protesters block train tracks at the Sants Station in Barcelona during a strike called by a proindepen­dence union in Catalonia yesterday.
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