The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hundreds of thousands to rally for Catalan independen­ce

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MADRID/BARCELONA: Hundreds of thousands of Catalans are expected to rally in the streets of Barcelona today in what campaigner­s hope will be a show of support for independen­ce after Madrid moved to block a planned referendum on the region’s split from Spain.

The ‘Diada’ day of Sept 11, which commemorat­es the fall of Barcelona to Spain in 1714, is often used by activists to voice their demands for an independen­t state. Coachloads of demonstrat­ors travel to Barcelona from villages in the region.

Hostility between Madrid and Barcelona has ramped up since Spain’s Constituti­onal Court last Thursday suspended the referendum, planned for Oct 1, following a legal challenge by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

The government says the referendum contravene­s the constituti­on, which states that Spain is indivisibl­e.

Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont has urged ‘independen­tistas’ to take to the streets today in a massive show of support for the referendum.

“It’s vital that we come out in force for this Diada for the Oct 1 referendum to be successful. I’ll be there,” he said on Twitter.

Spain’s state prosecutor has begun criminal proceeding­s against Puigdemont and 13 members of his cabinet on charges of misuse of public money, disobedien­ce and abuse of office after the Catalan parliament approved the referendum last Wednesday.

Rajoy has urged Catalan civil servants and mayors to uphold the law and to stop any preparatio­ns for the referendum over the next three weeks.

However, around two-thirds of Catalonia’s mayors have so far said they will allow the use of municipal facilities for the vote, with one mayor ripping up a court order warning of legal repercussi­ons in front of a cheering crowd.

Puigdemont has said he has ballot boxes and voting papers hidden and ready to deploy at any moment. Over the weekend, police searched a printing press and the offices of a local newspaper for signs of preparatio­n for the referendum. At the height of pro-independen­ce fervour in 2012, during a deep economic recession in Spain, around one million people took to the streets waving the Catalan flag and singing the Catalan anthem.

Polls have shown support for independen­ce waning since then, and those wanting a separate state are in a minority. However, a majority of Catalans want to hold a referendum on the issue. — Reuters

It’s vital that we come out in force for this Diada for the Oct 1 referendum to be successful. I’ll be there. Carles Puigdemont, Catalan leader

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 ??  ?? Protesters carry Esteladas, Catalan separatist flags, and Basque flags, during a rally in favour of a referendum on independen­ce from Spain for the autonomous community of Catalonia, in the Basque city of Bilbao, Spain. — Reuters photo
Protesters carry Esteladas, Catalan separatist flags, and Basque flags, during a rally in favour of a referendum on independen­ce from Spain for the autonomous community of Catalonia, in the Basque city of Bilbao, Spain. — Reuters photo

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