Perfil (Sabado)

Stalemate over Catalan independen­ce vote keeps Spain in suspense

Authoritie­s in Catalonia aim to ensure that a disputed referendum on independen­ce from Spain will take place peacefully on Sunday, despite a crackdown on the vote by the national government.

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Scores of Catalans flooded into downtown Barcelona yesterday in a show of support for a potentiall­y explosiv evo te onwh et herthepr osperous regio nshouldb re akaw ay from the rest of Spain.

The Spanish government and secession-minded authoritie­s in the northeaste­rn Catalonia region are on a collision course, with the independen­ce referendum still slated for Sunday despite efforts by the courts and police to stop it. With weeks of antagonism and tension coming to a head, neither side was showing signs of backing down from a confrontat­ion that has pitched Spain into a political and constituti­onal crisis.

Madrid has maintained the ballot cannot and will not happen because it contravene­s the constituti­on, which refers to “the indissolub­le unity of the Spanish nation.” Any vote on Catalan secession would have to be held across all of Spain, the government says.

“This secessioni­st process has been illegal from the start,” government spokesman Íñigo Méndez de Vigo said yesterday. “Since the referendum ... won’t have any political consequenc­e, pursuing it won’t do anything.”

Acting on court orders, police have confiscate­d about 10 million ballot papers and some 1.3 million posters advertisin­g the referendum, and have blocked the distributi­on of ballot boxes. Yesterday, the Catalan police were ordered to clear out all 2,315 polling stations, most of them in schools, by 6am S un da y to pre ventt her e fe rendum from taking place. Yesterday, the Catalan government unveiled white plastic containers it said would be used as ballot boxes. More than 2,300 polling stations would be set up for 5.3 million voters, Catalan government spokesman Jordi Turull said.

 ??  ?? People gather as they wait for the start of the closing meeting of the Catalan pro-independen­ce groups and political parties, ahead of the October 1 referendum, in Barcelona yesterday.
People gather as they wait for the start of the closing meeting of the Catalan pro-independen­ce groups and political parties, ahead of the October 1 referendum, in Barcelona yesterday.

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