The Day

Catalonia, Spain plan next moves after independen­ce vote

- By WILLIAM BOOTH

Barcelona — “Now what?” This is what people on the streets here were asking after more than 2 million Catalans voted overwhelmi­ngly Sunday in a chaotic, violent referendum to declare independen­ce from Spain.

The mood was not jubilation. It was anxiety.

On Monday, secessioni­st leaders prepared to present the results to Catalonia’s regional parliament, which has vowed to move forward with the creation of an independen­t republic.

But nervous European leaders, who watched the chaos and violence explode on Sunday, warned the region in northeaste­rn Spain to pause.

The European Union saw the referendum as a violation of the Spanish constituti­on and privately worried about other secessioni­st movements in Europe.

The lopsided vote Sunday is sure to be vigorously challenged in the Spanish courts, which have already declared the vote illegal. The central government in Madrid has described the referendum and its results as illegitima­te.

There was no sign of contrition from Madrid on Monday that its National Police and Guardia Civil militia had gone too far in trying to stop the vote, despite scenes of officers clad in riot gear firing rubber bullets, whipping citizens at polling stations with rubber batons and dragging some, including women, away by their hair.

Just the opposite. Spanish authoritie­s generally commended the police. The Spanish interior minister conceded that some of the violence looked “unpleasant,” but the response by riot police was “proportion­ate,” he said.

According to the Catalan government, which announced the results early Monday, 90 percent of the ballots cast were for independen­ce — with 2,020,144 people voting yes and 176,566 no.

Turnout was low — just 42 percent. More than 2.2 million people were reported to have cast ballots, Catalan authoritie­s said, out of 5.3 million registered voters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States