The National - News

CHAOS AND CLASHES AS CATALONIA VOTES

Police in body armour fire plastic bullets and hundreds injured during ‘illegal’ independen­ce poll in Spain

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At least 460 people were injured as Spanish police burst into voting stations and charged at Catalans trying to vote in an independen­ce referendum that has plunged Spain into a constituti­onal crisis.

Amid pouring rain, buzzing helicopter­s and wailing sirens from emergency vehicles, Spanish police in body armour and with shields raided several schools where voting was taking place to stop Catalans from registerin­g their votes. The police used batons and rubber bullets in Barcelona, while pro-secessioni­sts threw rocks at officers in response to the crackdown.

“Police are coming to the polling stations and beating them up. We’ve seen a lot of blood,”

Marta Rosique, a pro-independen­ce spokespers­on, told The National.

“They are using violence in order to stop people from deciding their future. The people are actually acting in a very passive way – as we have always done. But their answer is just violence.”

Catalan officials also criticised the police’s use of disproport­ionate force as early reports said 73 per cent of polling stations were open to voters. The police were acting under orders from the central government in Madrid, which says it is protecting the constituti­on as it prohibits secession unless approved by parliament. At least 460 people were injured in Barcelona, said the Catalan Emergency Services. There were also reports of police clashing with voters in towns outside Barcelona.

“We have initiated contacts with the EU about the violation of fundamenta­l rights that puts the very same EU at risk,” said the Catalan foreign minister Raul Romeva. The Spanish government and police have taken numerous steps to halt the referendum including arresting Catalan officials, destroying ballot papers and shutting down websites.

But Catalan voters have defied the government at every turn.

Many camped inside schools overnight after the Catalan police, the Mossos d’Esquadra, were ordered by the central government to close schools that were to be used as voting stations. The Catalan newspaper Ara reported that at some schools Catalans spent the night playing games to pass the time and offered coffee to Mossos officers when they arrived at 6am.

Most polling stations reported that Mossos did little to intervene in the voting process, other than to warn voters that the referendum was illegal. Some videos on social media appeared to show them confrontin­g the national Guardia Civil.

Despite reports of violence across the city, voting went smoothly at the Escola Laboure in central Barcelona during the morning.

The atmosphere was calm, although less festive than in the lead-up to the vote, as rumours of undercover police and a raid circulated through the queue that snaked through the square near the Museum of Modern Art.

Spain’s prime minister Mariano Rajoy has reiterated that the vote is illegal and unconstitu­tional, but Catalans accuse his government of underminin­g free speech and democracy.

“For me the first thing is visibility. It’s not a conflict but it’s an issue. We want to decide. So for me it’s important to say, ‘Hey, we are here and we want to speak up’,” Muriel Palma, a Barcelona resident, told The National at Escola Laboure.

“Independen­ce or not; that’s not the point. At least not for me. I’m not on the street because I want to be independen­t. I’m here because I think we have to have the right to vote. On any issue, there should be the right to vote.

“From a marketing perspectiv­e they are being stupid,” she said, when asked about Madrid’s response.

At noon in the Saint Antoni neighbourh­ood of Barcelona there was little indication of the unfolding crisis. Tourists milled the streets and people enjoyed late breakfast and coffee at cafes.

Local media reported that internatio­nal observers from Ecuador were surprised by the police’s heavy-handed response to the referendum. “They have used force to prevent voting. We have everything recorded, we must ask for explanatio­ns and responsibi­lities,” the Ecuadorian­s told Ara. The Scottish National Party reported that two Scottish observers were detained by police for 45 minutes.

FC Barcelona announced yesterday afternoon that their league match against Las Palmas would go ahead, but behind closed doors. The Spanish league denied Barcelona’s request for the fixture to be postponed, which the Catalan team won 3-0.

Underscori­ng the far-reaching nature of the Catalan crisis, Barca’s rivals, Las Palmas, wore a special kit for the match, which included the Spanish flag to show their support for national unity.

 ?? Reuters ?? People are barred from entering a polling station and casting their vote in Sant Julia de Ramis, Catalonia, by Spanish Civil Guard, which was sent to the region by the Spanish government. Catalan officials criticised the police’s use of force
Reuters People are barred from entering a polling station and casting their vote in Sant Julia de Ramis, Catalonia, by Spanish Civil Guard, which was sent to the region by the Spanish government. Catalan officials criticised the police’s use of force

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