Arab News

Catalonia weighs options as Spain ups the stakes

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BARCELONA: Catalonia’s separatist­s were planning their response on Sunday after Spain took drastic steps to stop the region from breaking away by dissolving its separatist government and forcing new elections.

Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont and his regional executive — who sparked Spain’s worst political crisis in decades by holding a banned independen­ce referendum on Oct. 1 — will be stripped of their jobs and their ministries taken over under measures announced Saturday by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

“Yesterday there was a fullyfledg­ed coup against Catalan institutio­ns,” said Catalan government spokesman Jordi Turull.

“What happens now, with everyone in agreement and unity, is that we will announce what we will do and how,” he told Catalunya Radio.

Rajoy has taken Spain into uncharted legal waters by moving to wrest back powers from the semi-autonomous region, which could see Madrid take control of the Catalan police force and replace its public media chiefs.

The move sparked outrage among separatist­s, with nearly half a million taking to the streets of regional capital Barcelona and Puigdemont declaring Rajoy guilty of “the worst attack on institutio­ns and Catalan people” since the dictatorsh­ip of Francisco Franco.

Among other repressive measures, Franco — who ruled from 1939 until 1975 — took Catalonia’s powers away and banned official use of the Catalan language.

Though Catalans are deeply split on whether to break away from Spain, autonomy remains a sensitive issue in the northeaste­rn region of 7.5 million people, which fiercely defends its language and culture and has previously enjoyed control over its policing, education and health care.

Rajoy said he had no choice but to force Puigdemont out as he refuses to drop his threat to declare independen­ce after a referendum that had been declared unconstitu­tional.

Responding to accusation­s of a “coup,” Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis retorted: “If there is a coup d’etat, it is one that has been followed by Mr. Puigdemont and his government.”

He told BBC television: “What we are doing is following strictly the provisions of our constituti­on.”

Spain’s Senate is set to approve the measures by the end of next week. Rajoy’s conservati­ve Popular Party (PP) holds a majority in the upper house, while other major parties also back his efforts to prevent a break-up of the nation.

In a crisis that has sent jitters through one of Spain’s most important regional economies and rattled the stock markets, Rajoy has ordered fresh elections to be called within six months of the Senate hearing, which would see polls held by mid-June at the latest.

 ??  ?? Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont and Vice-President Oriol Junqueras at a demonstrat­ion on Saturday in Barcelona. (AFP)
Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont and Vice-President Oriol Junqueras at a demonstrat­ion on Saturday in Barcelona. (AFP)

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