The Borneo Post

Catalonia launches its independen­ce challenge against Spain

-

BARCELONA: Spain is facing its deepest political crisis in decades after Catalonia’s regional parliament passed a law paving the way for an independen­ce referendum on Oct 1, with Madrid set to seek any means possible to block it.

The looming showdown comes three weeks after jihadist attacks in Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, and a seaside resort which killed 16 people and wounded more than 120.

“The concept of state and unity of the homeland ... doesn’t have a future in modern democratic Europe,” said the president of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, at the end of his speech late Wednesday after the vote.

Lawmakers approved the bill despiteaFe­bruaryruli­ngbySpain’s Constituti­onal Court declaring it would be unconstitu­tional.

Shortly after the law was passed Puigdemont and the rest of his cabinet signed a decree calling the referendum, presenting a show of unity in the face of threats of legal action by Madrid, which deems the plebiscite illegal.

Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said before the law was passed that the government had asked the Constituti­onal Court to declare “void and without effect the agreements adopted” by the Catalan parliament.

She also denounced the regional assembly’s agreement to quickly vote on the bill with little debate as an “act of force” characteri­stic of “dictatoria­l regimes”.

At the same time, public prosecutor­s announced they would seek criminal charges for disobedien­ce against the president of the Catalan parliament, Carme Forcadell, and other Catalan officials for allowing the vote on the referendum law.

In a tweet earlier, Forcadell said she had requested that the 12 judges at the Constituti­onal Court be disqualifi­ed, calling them “another extension of the state which has lost all legitimacy”.

Most of the court’s judges have been nominated by lawmakers from Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s Popular Party. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia