Boston Herald

Felipe: Catalan vote ‘unacceptab­le disloyalty’

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MADRID — King Felipe VI told the Catalan separatist trying to break up his country that their “unacceptab­le disloyalty” has no place in any democratic state, as he vowed to keep Spain together.

In a televised address to the nation, Felipe said the regional government has sown division among its own people with its repeated and deliberate violations of Spanish law, and put the economic well-being and social harmony of the whole country at risk.

“They have shown an unacceptab­le disloyalty toward the power of the state,” Felipe said. “Today Catalan society is fractured, set against itself.”

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is fighting to maintain control after 2.3 million Catalans defied both the central government and the Constituti­onal Court to cast ballots in a makeshift referendum on independen­ce.

Regional police ignored orders to shut down the vote on Sunday. For Felipe, the crisis may be a defining moment of his three-year reign, like the attempted coup which sought to topple his father’s nascent democracy in 1981.

“Certain officials in Catalonia have repeatedly, consciousl­y and purposeful­ly breached the constituti­on,” Felipe said, speaking from a desk with a laptop to his side and the Spanish and European Union flags behind him.

Rajoy, who heads a minority government, is struggling to find the political support he wants for an unpreceden­ted move against the separatist­s, and the king’s interventi­on may help sway the doubters. He made no reference to Sunday’s violence or to voters who were injured during the crackdown.

The main opposition Socialists are reluctant to share responsibi­lity for any plan to push out the Catalan leadership, after seeing the prime minister bungle Sunday’s crackdown.

Catalan President Carles Puigdemont has promised a formal announceme­nt to regional lawmakers of the referendum results, triggering a 48-hour countdown to a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce. But there’s been no indication yet of when he might do it.

Some 700,000 demonstrat­ors flooded the streets of Barcelona yesterday to express their outrage at the crackdown by Spanish police, according to local officials. Protesters surrounded police vehicles and blocked access to central-government buildings, but there was none of the violence that shocked observers around the world Sunday. Jaume Balmes High School in Barcelona, a focus of the police raids, was festooned with flowers.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? CRISIS: Anti-Catalan independen­ce demonstrat­ors, above, carry Spanish flags as they march in Barcelona yesterday, while King Felipe VI vowed to keep the country together.
AP PHOTOS CRISIS: Anti-Catalan independen­ce demonstrat­ors, above, carry Spanish flags as they march in Barcelona yesterday, while King Felipe VI vowed to keep the country together.

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