Otago Daily Times

700 Catalan mayors summoned over vote

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MADRID: Spain’s state prosecutor has summoned more than 700 Catalan mayors who have backed an independen­ce referendum, in an escalation of Madrid’s efforts to block the vote that it has declared illegal.

Officials engaging in any preparatio­ns for the vote could be charged with civil disobedien­ce, abuse of office and misuse of public funds, the prosecutor said in a letter delivered to local authoritie yesterday.

If the mayors do not answer the summons, police should arrest them, it added.

One mayor said the legal move was unpreceden­ted.

‘‘We don’t think any European country has ever tried to make more than 700 mayors testify,’’ Neus Lloveras, mayor of Vilanova i la Geltru near Barcelona, head of the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties for Independen­ce (AMI), said.

‘‘We have nothing to hide. When we have to go and testify, we will say everything we have been saying for days, that we owe it to our people to keep working to make sure they can freely express themselves at the ballot box,’’ he told reporters.

But the small, anticapita­list CUP group, which governs 19 Catalan municipali­ties, said it would not answer the summons, and called on other political forces to do the same.

Catalonia’s regional parliament passed laws last week to prepare for a referendum on October 1. Spain’s Constituti­onal Court suspended the vote after Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy challenged it in the courts.

Judges are now considerin­g whether the legislatio­n contravene­s Spain’s constituti­on, which states that the country is indivisibl­e.

So far, 712 of a total 948 municipal leaders have said they would allow public spaces to be used for the referendum, according to AMI.

The mayor of Barcelona, the region’s most populous area, has yet to take a definitive position, and has asked for reassuranc­es that civil servants involved in the process will not risk losing their jobs.

The website set up by the Catalan government to give informatio­n on the vote, referendum.cat, stopped working yesterday, with Spanish media reporting that the regional prosecutor had ordered all websites promoting the referendum to be shut down.

Polls show a minority of Catalans want selfrule, although a majority want the chance to vote on the issue. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Barcelona this week to show support for independen­ce.

In a separate order, the Constituti­onal Court told regional government officials yesterday they had 48 hours to show how they were preventing the vote from going ahead.

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