Los Angeles Times

Resist Spain peacefully, separatist leader urges

The government in Madrid begins its administra­tive takeover of Catalonia.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Laura King molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Twitter: @mollyhf laura.king@latimes.com Twitter: @laurakingL­AT Hennessy-Fiske reported from Barcelona and King from Washington. Staff writer Meg Bernhard contribute­d from Barcelona.

BARCELONA, Spain — Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont called Saturday for peaceful resistance to direct rule by Madrid, a day after Spain’s central government fired him and dissolved his government in response to Catalonia’s unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce.

The Madrid government, meanwhile, began implementi­ng its administra­tive takeover of Catalonia, the first such imposition of direct central rule in a Spanish region since the advent of democracy nearly 40 years ago.

Puigdemont, in a brief prerecorde­d statement shown on Catalan public TV, called for resistance to Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s directives, but offered no specifics about his own situation.

“It’s very clear that the best form of defending gains made up until now is democratic opposition to Article 155,” Puigdemont said, referring to the constituti­onal provision that Madrid invoked in response to the region’s independen­ce drive.

The article gives the Spanish central government the authority to strip a region of its autonomous powers in the event of a serious breach of law. Catalonia, like other Spanish regions, was granted autonomy powers under the 1979 constituti­on that gave it limited control over its own affairs.

The mood in Barcelona, Catalonia’s capital, was largely calm Saturday, following a night of raucous street celebratio­ns — and some scattered violence — after the Catalan parliament’s vote to break away from Spain. Local police patrolled busy tourist areas near the Catalan parliament and government buildings, where hundreds of tourists mixed with independen­tistas in the mild afternoon sun.

In Madrid, thousands flooded a central plaza for a pro-unity rally, waving Spanish flags and chanting that Spain must remain undivided. There were shows of anti-secessioni­st sentiment in Barcelona, too, though on a relatively small scale.

“Long live Spain!” a man in a red shirt and bike shorts shouted as he pushed his bicycle past a crowd in front of the main Catalan administra­tive building.

Spain put its deputy prime minister, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria, in charge of day-to-day affairs in Catalonia. She has been a forceful advocate of the central government’s stance that Catalan separatist­s acted illegally and that the independen­ce votes — both in parliament on Friday and a referendum held Oct. 1 — are invalid.

There was widespread uncertaint­y over how the Spanish takeover will play out. The start of the workweek on Monday will yield clues as to how the region’s 200,000 civil servants will respond; some have already declared they will not obey directives from the central government.

One of Catalonia’s largest unions has called a 10day general strike starting Monday in support of independen­ce.

Another unknown was whether separatist lawmakers would be allowed to stand for parliament­ary seats in the regional elections that Rajoy set for Dec. 21.

Polls have suggested that Catalonia’s people are split roughly equally on the independen­ce question. The separatist side overwhelmi­ngly prevailed in the Oct. 1 referendum, but less than half the electorate voted after the central government urged people to shun the balloting.

Those opposing independen­ce also boycotted Friday’s parliament­ary vote.

Pro-independen­ce politician­s struck a defiant tone Saturday. Albano-Dante Fachin of the secessioni­st Podemos party suggested in an interview on Catalan radio that the independen­ce camp would refuse to take part in the Spanish-mandated balloting.

On the anti-secession side, the head of the Ciudadanos party in Catalonia, Albert Rivera, urged backers to take part in the Dec. 21 vote.

“We had a sad day yesterday, but we also saw the applicatio­n of the law and the constituti­on,” he said. “Our country is headed in the right direction.”

As part of its effort to bring the secessioni­sts to heel, the central government is seeking to further isolate Catalonia internatio­nally, dismantlin­g the region’s informal embassies in Europe and elsewhere. No country has offered recognitio­n of the independen­ce declaratio­n.

The Trump administra­tion on Friday offered support for the Madrid government, a North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on ally, saying that Catalonia is an integral part of Spain. Europe, too, has sharply rejected the independen­ce declaratio­n.

The European Commission’s president, Jean-Claude Juncker, called Saturday for respect for Spain’s constituti­onal order.

Twenty-four hours after the parliament’s independen­ce vote, secessioni­sts were still expressing happiness, but said they didn’t know what might happen next.

“No one knows,” said Pilar Morer, 70. “This is a hard time.”

Her father, a Republican, had been jailed in France under dictator Gen. Francisco Franco, and as a girl she had been forbidden to speak Catalan in public, daring to use her native language only secretly in her home.

“Our fathers, our grandfathe­rs, have been fighting for this,” she said. “We endure.”

Barcelona street vendor Jose Manuel went about his business as usual, selling magazines, selfie sticks and hats to passing tourists — an endeavor that earns him 450 euros, or about $520, a month. While he said he believed in Catalonia’s right to be independen­t, he worried about a potential currency change.

“It’s a big problem, the money,” he said, before hurrying to attend to a customer.

 ?? Pierre-Philippe Marcou AFP/Getty Images ?? YOUNG PEOPLE wrapped in Spanish f lags in Barcelona gather for a demonstrat­ion in support of unity.
Pierre-Philippe Marcou AFP/Getty Images YOUNG PEOPLE wrapped in Spanish f lags in Barcelona gather for a demonstrat­ion in support of unity.

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