Malta Independent

12 Catalan officials arrested over secession vote

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Spanish police arrested 12 people yesterday in raids on offices of the regional government of Catalonia, news reports said, intensifyi­ng a crackdown on the region’s preparatio­ns for a secession vote that Spain says is illegal.

It was the first time Spanish authoritie­s have detained Catalan officials since the campaign for a secession vote in Catalonia began to gather momentum in 2011.

Spain’s Europa Press news agency and other media outlets said the raids mostly targeted Catalonia’s economic and foreign department­s as authoritie­s worked to halt all preparator­y moves for the referendum planned for Oct. 1.

Hundreds of people immediatel­y began gathering to protest the raids and shout pro-independen­ce slogans outside government offices in the region’s capital, Barcelona.

The Catalan regional government confirmed Josep Maria Jove, secretary general of economic affairs, was among those arrested. Jove is number 2 to the region’s vice president and economy chief, Oriol Junqueras.

Police and judicial authoritie­s declined to give details on the operation because a judge has placed a secrecy order on it.

An Interior Ministry statement said only that Civil Guard police were carrying out an operation to gather evidence as part of investigat­ions into the referendum’s preparatio­ns.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservati­ve government is waging myriad legal battles to halt the referendum called by the pro-independen­ce coalition ruling Catalonia.

Backed by most Spanish opposition parties, the government says the referendum violates the constituti­on and that if Catalonia wants a vote it must work to change the constituti­on first.

The Constituti­onal Court has ordered the vote to be suspended as it studies its legality, but Catalan officials say they will press ahead regardless.

Catalonia represents a fifth of Spain’s 1.1-trillion-euro economy.

The region’s 7.5 million inhabitant­s overwhelmi­ngly favor a referendum but are roughly evenly divided over independen­ce.

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