The Borneo Post

Catalan parliament to defy Spanish ban on independen­ce debate

-

BARCELONA/ MADRID: Catalonia’s parliament will defy a Spanish court ban and go ahead on Monday with a debate that could lead to a declaratio­n of independen­ce, a regional government official said, as Spain’s worst political crisis in decades looked set to deepen.

“Parliament will discuss, parliament will meet. It will be a debate, and this is important,” the Catalan government’s head of foreign affairs, Raul Romeva, told BBC radio on Friday.

It was the pro-independen­ce regional government’s first clear response to a Constituti­onal Court decision on Thursday to suspend Monday’s planned parliament­ary session, and it raised the prospect of a tough response from the central government.

Spanish Prime Mariano Rajoy has offered all- party political talks to find a solution, opening the door to a deal giving Catalonia more autonomy.

Buthehasru­ledoutinde­pendence and rejected a Catalan proposal for internatio­nal mediation.

Spanish ruling-party lawmakers say Rajoy is considerin­g invoking the constituti­on to dissolve the regional parliament and force fresh Catalan elections if the region’s government goes ahead with an independen­ce declaratio­n.

On Thursday, the speaker of the Catalan parliament, Carme Forcadell, said parliament­ary leaders had not yet decided whether to defy the central court and go ahead with the session.

Romeva told the BBC that the crisis could only be resolved with politics, not via judicial means.

Parliament will discuss, parliament will meet. It will be a debate, and this is important.

His remarks hit Spanish stocks and bonds, including shares in the region’s two largest banks, Caixabank and Sabadell.

Sabadell decided on Thursday to move its legal base to Alicante.

Caixabank, Spain’s thirdlarge­st lender, will consider on Friday whether to also transfer its legal base away from Catalonia, a source said.

The court’s suspension order further aggravated one of the biggest crises to hit Spain since the establishm­ent of democracy on the 1975 death of General Francisco Franco.

Secessioni­st Catalan politician­s have pledged to unilateral­ly declare independen­ce at Monday’s session after staging an independen­ce referendum last Sunday.

Madrid had banned the vote and sought to thwart it by sending in riot police who use batons and rubber bullets on voters.

In a separate developmen­t that could raise tensions, Catalan police chief Josep Lluis Trapero was summoned to Spain’s High Court yesterday to answer accusation­s that he committed sedition by failing to ensure his police enforced a court ban on holding the referendum.

Unlike national police, Catalonia’s force, the Mossos d’Esquadra, did not use force to prevent people voting. — Reuters

Raul Romeva, Catalan government’s head of foreign affairs

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Trapero (right), arrives to the High Court in Madrid. — AFP photo
Trapero (right), arrives to the High Court in Madrid. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia