PAIN IN SPAIN
As cops attack voters, Catalonia says sí to secession
CATALONIA’S regional government declared a landslide win for the “yes” side in a referendum on independence from Spain that degenerated into mayhem Sunday, with more than 800 people injured as riot police attacked peaceful protesters and unarmed civilians trying to vote.
Catalonia has “won the right to become an independent state,” Catalan President Carles Puigdemont said after the polls closed, adding he would keep his pledge to declare independence unilaterally if the “yes” side wins.
“Today the Spanish state wrote another shameful page in its history with Catalonia,” Puigdemont added, saying he would appeal to the European Union to look into alleged human rights violations during the vote.
Catalan regional government spokesman Jordi Turull told reporters early Monday that 90% of the 2.26 million Catalans who voted chose the “yes” side in favor of independence. He said nearly 8% of voters rejected independence and the rest of the ballots were blank or void. He said 15,000 votes were still being counted.
The region has 5.3 million registered voters, and Turull said the number of ballots didn’t include those confiscated by Spanish police during raids aimed at stopping the vote.
No one knows what will happen if Catalan officials follow through on their pledge to use the vote as a basis for declaring independence, a provocation that would possibly remove from Spain one of its most prosperous regions, including the coastal city of Barcelona, the regional capital. Hundreds of police armed with truncheons and rubber bullets were sent in from other regions to confiscate ballots and stop the voting. Amateur video showed some officers dragging people out of polling stations by the hair, throwing some down stairs, kicking them and pushing them to the ground amid anguished, frightened screams.
Police were acting on a judge’s orders to stop the referendum, which the Spanish government had declared illegal and unconstitutional — and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said going forward with the vote only served to sow divisions.
In a televised address after the majority of polls closed Sunday, he thanked the Spanish police, saying they had acted with “firmness and serenity” — comments sure to anger Catalans.
Those seeking to break with Spain have long wanted more than the limited autonomy they now have, arguing they contribute far more than they receive from the central government, which controls key areas including taxes and infrastructure.