Spain’s top court confirms Catalonia referendum illegal
Spain’s top court has officially ruled that Catalonia’s disputed independence referendum was illegal because a regional law that backed it was against Spain’s constitution.
The Catalan regional parliament passed the socalled “self-determination referendum law” in early September.
Regional leaders went on to stage the 1 October referendum on whether the region should separate from Spain.
They said the “Yes” side won and that the result gave the region a mandate to declare independence.
Spain’s Constitutional Court had earlier suspended the law temporarily while judges assessed the Spanish government’s objection to it.
In its ruling yesterday, the court said the law was against national sovereignty and the “indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation”.
The court said the parliamentary session that approved the law also violated the country’s constitution.
The ruling was not surprising as Spain’s government had already repeatedly insisted the vote was illegal.
“We are facing an executive power in the state that uses the judiciary branch to block the legislative,” Catalan government spokesman Jordi Turull said after the ruling.
Catalan president Carles Puigdemont made an ambiguous statement about the region’s future last week, saying he has the mandate to declare independence but would not immediately move to put it into effect to allow time for talks and mediation.
Mr Puigdemont now has until tomorrow to backtrack on any steps the region has taken toward secession.
If he refuses, the central government has said it would invoke constitutional authority to restrict or revoke the areas of self-governance Catalonia has now.
Yesterday’s ruling came a day after a Madrid judge provisionally jailed two Catalan independence leaders, Jordi Sanchez and Jordi Cuixart, in a sedition investigation.
The judge ruled they were the orchestrators of massive demonstrations in September in Barcelona that hindered a police operation against preparations for the vote.
Protesters were gathering for a fresh round of demonstrations in Barcelona yesterday to demand their release.
“We urge the release of our political prisoners and call on Catalan authorities to revoke the suspension of the independence declaration and proclaim the Catalan republic,” said Aina Delgado Morell, a representative of Universitats per la Republica, a proindependence student organisation.
Students would keep protests going to “stop the repression”, she added.