Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Catalans demand leaders’ release

Pro-independen­ce demonstrat­ors at rally hear messages from jailed officials

- JOSEPH WILSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Hernan Munoz of The Associated Press.

BARCELONA, Spain — Streets in downtown Barcelona were packed Saturday with hundreds of thousands of pro-independen­ce Catalans who gathered to demand the release of jailed separatist leaders.

The rally’s grassroots organizers called for 10 prominent members of the secessioni­st movement in the northeaste­rn Spanish region to be freed from prison.

Eight former members of Catalonia’s dissolved Cabinet and two activists are in jail while Spanish authoritie­s investigat­e their alleged roles in promoting an illegal declaratio­n of independen­ce last month in violation of Spain’s Constituti­on.

A separate court in Madrid granted bail on Thursday to another six Catalan lawmakers also being investigat­ed in the secession push.

“We want to tell the world that we want freedom for our prisoners and freedom for Catalonia,” Agusti Alcoberro, the vice president of grassroots group National Catalan Assembly, told the crowd in Barcelona, the region’s capital.

Barcelona’s police said 750,000 people attended the rally.

Many of the protesters carried pro-independen­ce “estelada” flags, with its white star and blue triangle superimpos­ed over the traditiona­l red-and-yellow Catalan colors. Many also held signs saying in Catalan “Freedom Political Prisoners” and wore yellow ribbons as a symbol of their demands.

“[Spanish authoritie­s] are violating many rights of freedom against our people and we come here to say that we are against that and to demand the release of our prisoners who are in prison unjustly,” said 30-year-old engineer Joan Carles Roses.

Family members of the jailed separatist­s read messages from their loved ones to the crowd at the conclusion of the march.

Also on Saturday, the pro-independen­ce Republic Left party announced that its jailed leader Oriol Junqueras will be its top candidate for the coming regional elections on Dec. 21. The Catalan party is including other jailed leaders in its list for the regional parliament.

The Catalan conflict is the worst constituti­onal crisis to threaten Spain in nearly four decades.

A day after Catalonia’s Parliament voted in favor of a declaratio­n of independen­ce on Oct. 27, Spain’s government activated extraordin­ary powers given to it by the Senate to fire the region’s government, dissolve its parliament and call local elections.

While those separatist leaders now in jail obeyed a summons to appear in court in Madrid, deposed Catalan President Carles Puigdemont and four of his former ministers fled to Belgium, where they now await an extraditio­n hearing to return them to Spain.

Addressing the rally in Barcelona via a video message shown on a large screen, Puigdemont said: “We need you all to be very active. We want to hear your voice, both those of us in Brussels and those in prison.”

Puigdemont and his fellow separatist­s claim that a referendum on secession held Oct. 1 gave them a mandate for independen­ce, even though it had been prohibited by the nation’s highest court, failed to meet internatio­nal standards and was boycotted by anti-independen­ce parties. Less than half the electorate turned out to vote, and the referendum was also disrupted by brutal police raids.

No foreign power has recognized Catalonia’s claim to independen­ce. The European Union has warned that an independen­t Catalonia would be cast out of the 28-nation bloc.

The most recent regional elections show that Catalonia’s 7.5 million residents are roughly split over remaining a part of Spain or going their own way. Most pro-independen­ce supporters feel that the Catalan language and culture would have a better chance of flourishin­g in a separate state and that their economic prospects would be improved.

The business sector has so far not been convinced, with over 2,000 companies transferri­ng their headquarte­rs out of the northeaste­rn region in recent weeks for fears of being pushed out of the common EU market.

The Spanish Constituti­on says the nation is “indivisibl­e” and that questions of national sovereignt­y should be addressed by the national Parliament in Madrid.

“[Spanish authoritie­s] are violating many rights of freedom against our people and we come here to say that we are against that and to demand the release of our prisoners who are in prison unjustly.” — Engineer Joan Carles Roses

 ?? AP/EMILIO MORENATTI ?? Demonstrat­ors in Barcelona, Spain, call Saturday for the release of jailed Catalan politician­s.
AP/EMILIO MORENATTI Demonstrat­ors in Barcelona, Spain, call Saturday for the release of jailed Catalan politician­s.

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