Catalan separatists accused of a totalitarian attitude
Protests took place in Catalonia again yesterday as Spain’s foreign minister Josep Borrell accused separatists of acting in a “totalitarian” manner by refusing to compromise with opponents of secession.
The regional transport system suffered severe disruption as a result of demonstrations that began on Monday after nine pro-secession Catalan leaders were jailed for their part in the 2017 failed independence bid.
So far, at least 170 people have been injured, including 40 police officers, in clashes between protesters and security forces at Barcelona’s international airport as well as towns and cities in the region. Three people were arrested, authorities said.
One man was reported to have lost an eye after being hit in the face with a rubber bullet fired by police.
About 20 flights were cancelled at Barcelona’s El Prat airport yesterday, in comparison with 110 the day before, Spain’s airport operator Aena said. Students are due to begin a three-day strike today.
Mr Borrell, who is soon to become the European Union’s top diplomat, conceded the sentencing had not resolved tension in the region.
“Yesterday, today and tomorrow it is and remains a political problem that has to be solved,” Mr Borrell said.
“When one excludes part of the population because they don’t think like one, and only considers as the people those who think like one, this is a totalitarian attitude,” said the Catalan minister, who comes from the province of Lleida.
Spain’s Supreme Court sentenced the Catalan separatist leaders to between nine and 13 years in prison for sedition over their role in the holding of a banned referendum and a short-lived independence declaration.
Former regional vice president, Oriol Junqueras, received the longest jail sentence of 13 years for sedition and misuse of public funds.
Three other defendants in the landmark ruling were found guilty of disobedience and were fined.
The convicted politicians were banned from holding public office. The ruling affects six of them who were planning to stand in Spain’s November 10 general election.
A Spanish judge renewed an
international arrest warrant for Carles Puigdemont, the former president of Catalonia who fled Spain after the secession bid.
Mr Puigdemont protested with other supporters of independence for the region outside the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium.
“We need the whole support of European democrats. Because that crisis concerns European democracy and the quality of European democracy. It is not a Catalan, a regional or a Spanish issue,” he said.
The sentences could invigorate the north-eastern Spanish region’s independence movement with Catalonia’s president Quim Torra calling for a referendum to be held.
“We have to continue defending the right of Catalonia to self-determination,” Mr Torra said yesterday. “A referendum is the most positive solution for solving this situation.”
A Catalan government poll published in July showed that 44 per cent of voters in the wealthy region support independence, while 48.3 per cent are opposed.
The highest support for independence was found in December 2017, two months after the referendum.