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SPAIN CELEBRATES AMID CATALAN CRISIS

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Army troops and police are to march Thursday in Madrid as Spain’s celebrates its national day, amid one of the country’s biggest crises as its powerful northeaste­rn region of Catalonia threatens independen­ce.

King Felipe VI, accompanie­d by national and regional politician­s, will preside over the colorful annual parade as Spain awaits a response to a government request to Catalonia’s leader to clarify by Monday if he has already declared independen­ce — in which case Spain warns it may apply Article 155 of its Constituti­on and begin taking direct control of the region.

Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont announced Tuesday that he was using the claimed victory in a banned Oct. 1 secession referendum to proceed with a declaratio­n of Catalan independen­ce.

But he proposed freezing its implementa­tion for a few weeks to allow for dialogue and mediation with the national government in Madrid.

Speaking in the national parliament Wednesday, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said Puigdemont’s response to the ultimatum would be crucial in deciding “events over the coming days.”

In a tweet later, Puigdemont said, “We demand dialogue and the response is to put Ar-

2.3 M The estimated number of Catalans, representi­ng 43% of the region’s electorate, who voted in the Oct. 1 independen­ce referendum. We demand dialogue and the response is to put Article 155 (of the Constituti­on) on the table. Message understood. CARLES PUIGDEMONT Catalan President

ticle 155 on the table. Message understood.”

Puigdemont’s deputy, Catalan vice president Oriol Junqueras, also tweeted: “A sincere dialogue is what the internatio­nal community wants and what Catalonia expects, not confrontat­ion and new threats.”

Thursday’s holiday is known as Dia de la Hispanidad, or Hispanic Day. It commemorat­es Christophe­r Columbus’ arrival in the New World and is also Spain’s armed forces day

Regional leaders are invited to attend the parade but for many years officials from the Basque and Catalan regions, where independen­ce sentiment runs high, have boycotted it.

Several town halls in Catalonia have said they will ignore the holiday and work as normal.

About 2.3 million Catalans — or 43 percent of the region’s electorate — voted in the independen­ce referendum.

Catalonia said 90 percent favored secession and it declared the results valid. Opponents boycotted the vote.

The day was marred by violence as police under court orders tried to prevent voting taking place.

Polls indicate that Catalonia’s 7.5 million residents are evenly divided over secession. The region contribute­s a fifth of Spain’s $1.3-trillion economy.

 ?? CELEBRATIO­N. A woman waves a Spanish flag while celebratin­g a holiday known as “Dia de la Hispanidad” or Spain’s National Day in Barcelona. AP FOTO ??
CELEBRATIO­N. A woman waves a Spanish flag while celebratin­g a holiday known as “Dia de la Hispanidad” or Spain’s National Day in Barcelona. AP FOTO

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