Khaleej Times

Rhetoric heats up as Catalonia readies for independen­ce vote

-

barcelona — A parade of farmers’ tractors rolled into Barcelona on Friday in support for Catalonia’s independen­ce vote as Catalan and Spanish authoritie­s issued conflictin­g statements on whether the disputed referendum would even take place on Sunday.

The vehicles, many with Catalan flags, drove slowly into the city to the cheers of residents who stood by the side of the road.

The demand by Catalan separatist­s to hold an independen­ce vote for the prosperous northeaste­rn region of 7.5 million people has thrown Spain into a political and constituti­onal crisis.

Spain’s government calls the vote illegal, since it violates the constituti­on, and the country’s Constituti­onal Court has ordered it suspended. Spanish authoritie­s have been cracking down on efforts to organise the vote, detaining organisers and confiscati­ng ballots and posters.

The disputed vote has even sparked a showdown over who police in Catalonia should report to, the region’s ruling separatist politician­s or the central government in Madrid. European Union officials on Friday ruled out any mediation in the clash.

Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont and Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, in separate interviews with AP, had urged Europe to intervene to break the political deadlock over the vote.

But European Parliament President Antonio Tajani said on Friday at an EU summit in Estonia that the dispute is “a Spanish problem in which we can do little. It’s a problem of respecting Spanish laws that Spaniards have to resolve.”

Tajani says the EU is maintainin­g its support of Spain’s government because “on a legal level, Madrid is right.” “I think it’s important to talk on a political level” after the vote, he added.

The EU has said that Catalonia will be ejected from the bloc if it declares independen­ce and would need to apply to rejoin it in a lengthy process than any EU member can veto.

Spain’s cabinet spokesman said on Friday there will no referendum on Sunday and warned Catalan officials that they would “face consequenc­es” for pressing ahead with a vote that was suspended by the country’s Constituti­onal Court.

“The government has a constituti­onal mandate to enforce the laws maintainin­g civic order,” Culture Minister Inigo Mendez de Vigo said Friday during a weekly press briefing. “Nobody is above the laws and whoever violates them will face consequenc­es.”

Catalan officials, however, announced that more than 60 per cent of the 5.3 million eligible voters are expected to cast ballots on Sunday despite the Spanish government’s attempts to stop the referendum.

Separatist groups have been calling on parents to organise activities with students in schools this weekend in order to occupy the buildings so Spanish police can’t show up to close them off before the vote.

“Catalans will vote — even if somebody takes voting stations by assault and tries to avoid something as natural as placing a voting slip in a ballot,” regional vice president Oriol Junqueras told reporters.

Along with two other top Catalan officials, Junqueras displayed for the first time a prototype of the plastic ballot boxes planned for more than 2,300 voting stations.

Acting on a judge’s order, Spanish police and civil guard officers have been searching for the ballot boxes for weeks. — AP’

 ?? AP ?? People with the estelada, or independen­ce flags, raise slogans on top of parked tractors during a protest by farmers in Barcelona on Friday. Authoritie­s in Catalonia aim to ensure that a disputed referendum on independen­ce from Spain will take place...
AP People with the estelada, or independen­ce flags, raise slogans on top of parked tractors during a protest by farmers in Barcelona on Friday. Authoritie­s in Catalonia aim to ensure that a disputed referendum on independen­ce from Spain will take place...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates