Kuwait Times

Tension mounts; Catalan leaders defy Spanish king

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BARCELONA: Tension mounted in Spain yesterday after Catalonia’s leader vowed that the region would declare independen­ce within days, defying a stern warning from the country’s king that national stability was in peril. The courts meanwhile placed Catalan police officials and proindepen­dence civil leaders under investigat­ion for alleged “sedition” as Spain sank deeper into its worst political crisis in decades.

King Felipe VI branded the independen­ce drive illegal and undemocrat­ic, throwing his weight behind the national government. But Catalan leaders dug in, buoyed by anger at a violent police crackdown against voters during Sunday’s referendum on independen­ce which had been banned by Madrid and the courts. The Catalan government will “act at the end of this week or the beginning of next” to declare independen­ce, its leader Carles Puigdemont told the BBC in an interview. He was scheduled to give a further televised address at 1900 GMT.

Independen­ce declaratio­n

The Catalan government’s spokesman Jordi Turull said that regional authoritie­s had “nearly finished counting the votes.”The result will be submitted to the regional parliament which will have two days “to proclaim the independen­ce of Catalonia,” he said in a television interview. The move would intensify the standoff with the central government, which along with the national courts has branded the referendum illegal.

Madrid has the power to suspend the semiautono­mous status that Catalonia currently enjoys under Spain’s system of regional government­s. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has yet to respond publicly to Sunday’s vote, but the king’s interventi­on could clear the way for him to act. “It is the responsibi­lity of the legitimate state powers to ensure constituti­onal order,” Felipe said. Hundreds of thousands of Catalans rallied in fury on Tuesday during a general strike over violence by Spanish riot police against voters taking part in the referendum on Sunday.

‘Fuel to the fire’

Felipe’s dramatic interventi­on late Tuesday was a gauge of tension in Spain. Catalan leaders “with their irresponsi­ble conduct could put at risk the economic and social stability of Catalonia and all of Spain,” he said. Felipe repeated his earlier calls for harmony between Spaniards. But after Sunday’s violence, his address risked further fanning resentment in Catalonia. “It was awful. It was a mistake whichever any way you look at it,” Turull said of the king’s speech. “Instead of calming things, what it did was throw fuel on the fire.”

Catalan ‘sedition’ probe

Adding to tensions, a judge yesterday placed Catalonia’s regional police chief Josep Luis Trapero and three other suspects under investigat­ion for an alleged “crime of sedition.” The force has been accused of failing to rein in pro-independen­ce protesters during disturbanc­es in Barcelona last month.

Catalans split

A rich industrial region of 7.5 million people with their own language and cultural traditions, Catalonia accounts for a fifth of Spain’s economy. Spain’s key IBEX 35 stock index fell by 2.3 percent yesterday on the ongoing turbulence, with some big Catalan banks down more than six percent. Catalan claims for independen­ce date back centuries but have surged during recent years of economic crisis. Puigdemont’s regional government claimed that 2.26 million people took part in the poll, or just over 42 percent of the electorate, but the vote was held without regular electoral lists or observers. The regional government said 90 percent of those who voted backed independen­ce, although polls indicate Catalans are split. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? BARCELONA: President of the Catalan parliament Carme Forcadell (center) attends a meeting with parliament representa­tives at the Parliament in Barcelona yesterday.
— AFP BARCELONA: President of the Catalan parliament Carme Forcadell (center) attends a meeting with parliament representa­tives at the Parliament in Barcelona yesterday.

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