The Star Malaysia

Violence mounts in Spain after separatist rally

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BARCELONA: Violent clashes escalated in Barcelona as radical Catalan separatist­s hurled rocks and fireworks at police, who responded with teargas and rubber bullets, turning the city centre into a chaotic battlegrou­nd.

The deteriorat­ion came on Friday, the fifth consecutiv­e day of protests in the Catalan capital and elsewhere over a Spanish court’s jailing of nine separatist leaders on sedition charges over a failed independen­ce bid two years ago.

Around half a million people rallied in Barcelona earlier on Friday, police said, in the biggest gathering since Monday’s court ruling as separatist­s also called a general strike in the major tourist destinatio­n.

But while most marchers appeared peaceful, hordes of young protesters went on a rampage near the police headquarte­rs, igniting a huge blaze that sent plumes of black smoke into the air as police fired teargas to disperse them.

Other fires raged near Plaza de Catalunya at the top of the tourist hotspot Las Ramblas, where hundreds of demonstrat­ors rallied in defiance of the police, who tried to disperse them with water cannons.

“Anti-fascist Catalonia!” they roared. “The streets will always be ours!”

Scores of police vans could be seen fanning out around the streets, their sirens screaming as the regional police warned people in a message in English on Twitter “not to approach” the city centre.

The situation later appeared calmer, according to a police spokesman.

Earlier, many thousands of “freedom marchers”, who had set out to walk from five regional towns on Wednesday, arrived in Barcelona wearing walking boots and carrying hiking poles.

The rally coincided with the general strike, prompting the cancellati­on of 57 flights, the closure of shops, business and several top tourist attraction­s, and slowing public transport to a trickle in a region that accounts for about a fifth of Spain’s economic output.

Activists also cut off Catalonia’s main cross-border highway with France.

In downtown Barcelona, many shops and luxury outlets were closed on the city’s Paseo de Gracia, with blackened, charred patches a testimony to the nightly clashes that have raged since Monday.

“With these demonstrat­ions bringing this large city to a halt, we are using Barcelona like a microphone,” said 23-year-old engineerin­g student Ramon Pararada.

“It’s all in reaction to the injustice.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Strength in numbers: Protesters marching along the Passeig de Gracia avenue and waving pro-independen­ce Catalan Estelada flags. — Bloomberg
Strength in numbers: Protesters marching along the Passeig de Gracia avenue and waving pro-independen­ce Catalan Estelada flags. — Bloomberg

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