Bangkok Post

Catalan govt wilts as separatist­s split

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BARCELONA: Catalonia’s separatist executive was Tuesday accused of playing a “dangerous” game after the regional leader encouraged radical independen­ce activists to carry out disruptive acts on the anniversar­y of a banned referendum that culminated in clashes.

Hundreds of separatist protesters knocked down barriers at the regional parliament in Barcelona on Monday evening, clashing with police in stark contrast with the usually peaceful nature of Catalonia’s independen­ce movement.

Analysts said this reflected the movement’s divisions and lack of direction, with some pushing for direct confrontat­ion with Madrid and others calling for moderation, while at the same time trying to keep the spirit of last year’s secession bid alive.

Reacting to the clashes, Catalan government spokeswoma­n Elsa Artadi acknowledg­ed it was “the first time that we are faced with this situation within the independen­ce movement”.

She told Catalan television that a “minority” took part in the unrest.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez rapped regional leader Quim Torra, asking him to “not endanger political normalisat­ion by encouragin­g radicals to lay siege to institutio­ns which represent all Catalans”.

“Violence isn’t the way forward,” Mr Sanchez, who is attempting to negotiate with Catalan leaders and also depends on separatist lawmakers to prop up his minority government, said in a tweet.

Under pressure from more hardline separatist­s, Mr Torra warned on Tuesday that Catalan separatist parties would withdraw backing for Mr Sanchez in the national parliament unless Madrid agrees by November to allow Catalonia to hold a binding selfdeterm­ination referendum.

“Catalans’ patience is not infinite,” he said during a debate in the Catalan parliament. He also asked for “serious self-criticism” from the separatist camp.

“We must demand that the mobilisati­on which we need always be non-violent, radically non-violent,” Mr Torra said.

Monday’s clashes forced the leader in Catalonia of anti-secession party Ciudadanos to leave the building under escort in unrest that topped a restive day in the northeaste­rn region that remains sharply divided on independen­ce.

Radical activists called by a group naming itself the Committees for the Defence of the Republic (CDRs), many of them hooded, cut roads and railway lines, encouraged by Mr Torra — a staunch independen­ce supporter himself.

“The (independen­ce) movement is divided between radicals and an executive that isn’t sure where to go, and which is also divided,” said Oriol Bartomeus, politics professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona.

“I think Torra shares the CDRs’ ideas but he knows perfectly well that the independen­ce movement will lose if it goes down that road. Torra is in the middle,” he said, describing the situation as “very dangerous.”

Catalonia’s banned independen­ce referendum on Oct 1, 2017 was marred by a violent crackdown by police ordered to stop peaceful voters from casting their ballot, in footage that went around the world.

A year later, the tables appeared to have turned with images of radical independen­ce supporters cutting roads and railway lines, muscling their way into a government building and clashing with police.

Miquel Iceta, head of the Socialist party in Catalonia, said the unrest “highlighte­d that a regional president cannot encourage mobilisati­on if he is then unable to guarantee security.” He said it also showed “that the Catalan government’s discourse, as it is far from reality, generates frustratio­n and violence among its most radical followers.”

Even former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, who is in self-exile in Belgium after last October’s secession bid, condemned the violence.

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