Waikato Times

Court ruling fuels Catalan discontent

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SPAIN: Spain’s top court ruled yesterday that an independen­ce referendum in Catalonia was unconstitu­tional, adding weight to government efforts to block the region from breaking away from the rest of the country but not persuading demonstrat­ors demanding the release of two jailed separatist activists.

The Constituti­onal Court’s ruling was not a surprise. The Spanish government had repeatedly insisted the referendum was illegal. Regional leaders defied the Madrid-based central government and held the October 1 vote even after police seized millions of ballots and used force to close polling stations.

Supporters of secession maintain the ‘‘Yes’' vote won and Catalan officials have a mandate to declare independen­ce. Portraying the central government as repressive, they showed no signs of giving up despite the court ruling that concluded the referendum was invalid.

Thousands of people holding candles and banners flooded a main avenue in Barcelona on Tuesday night to demand the release of the two Catalan activists jailed by Spanish authoritie­s on possible sedition charges a day earlier.

Jordi Sanchez and Jordi Cuixart, the leaders of grassroots organisati­ons Catalan National Assembly and Omnium Cultural, are being investigat­ed for organising rallies last month that allegedly hampered a judicial probe of preparatio­ns for the secession vote.

‘‘We are facing an executive power in the state that uses the judiciary branch to block the legislativ­e,’' Catalan government spokesman Jordi Turull said shortly after the Constituti­onal Court ruling was announced.

Spanish Justice Minister Rafael Catala said Sanchez and Cuixart, were jailed because they are suspected of committed crimes by interferin­g with a judge’s orders. Catala rejected the term ‘‘political prisoners’' to describe the two, saying it could be considered a case of ‘‘politician­s in prison.’'

Catalan President Carles Puigdemont made an ambiguous statement about the region’s future last week, saying he has the mandate to declare independen­ce but adding that he would not immediatel­y move to implement it in order to allow time for talks with the central government.

Spain has said that no dialogue can take place with independen­ce on the table because a reform of the country’s constituti­on with an ample majority in the national parliament is the only legal way to achieve secession.

On Tuesday, a Madrid judge provisiona­lly jailed Sanchez and Cuixart, leaders of different grassroots groups promoting independen­ce for Catalonia. The judge ruled they were behind huge demonstrat­ions September 20-21 in Barcelona that got in the way of a police operation designed to prevent the referendum. –

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