Sun.Star Cebu

EU CLOSES RANKS BEHIND MADRID

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron express support for Spain.

-

The EU closed ranks behind Spain in the Catalan crisis Thursday, saying there was “no space” for outside interventi­on by the bloc as France and Germany voiced strong support for Madrid.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron threw their weight behind Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in the dramatical­ly escalating standoff over Catalonia’s independen­ce drive at a summit of EU leaders in Brussels.

As the Spanish government vowed to take back powers from the Catalan regional government and its leader warned he could declare independen­ce, EU President Donald Tusk scotched any notion the bloc could step in or mediate.

“We have all of us our own emotions, opinions and assessment­s but formally speaking there is no space for EU interventi­on here,” Tusk told a news conference at the summit.

Brussels has insisted the dispute over Catalonia’s independen­ce referendum is an internal matter for key EU member Spain, resisting Catalan efforts to internatio­nalise the issue and backing Madrid’s position that the vote was illegal.

“We back the position of the Spanish government,” Merkel, the EU’s most powerful leader, said as she arrived for the summit.

“We hope there are solutions found on the basis of the Spanish constituti­on.” France has been outspoken in its support of the Madrid government during the crisis, Spain’s worst in de- cades, triggered by Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont holding a banned referendum on splitting from Spain.

Macron recently charged that the separatist­s were motivated in part by “economic selfishnes­s”.

The French president told reporters in Brussels he expected the 28 EU leaders to voice solid support for Madrid.

“This European Council will be marked by a message of unity -- unity with our member states facing crises, unity with Spain and very strong unity in discussion­s about Brexit,” he said.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? CRISIS. Bank customers in Catalonia are withdrawin­g money from financial institutio­ns that have moved their headquarte­rs to other locations in Spain amid the political crisis over Catalonia’s independen­ce bid.
AP FOTO CRISIS. Bank customers in Catalonia are withdrawin­g money from financial institutio­ns that have moved their headquarte­rs to other locations in Spain amid the political crisis over Catalonia’s independen­ce bid.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines