Gulf News

Why do Catalonian­s want independen­ce?

CATALANS FLOUT BAN ON INDEPENDEN­CE REFERENDUM TO CAST THEIR BALLOTS

- BY MICK O’REILLY Foreign Correspond­ent

Spanish federal police have clashed with Catalan separatist­s across this city and in neighbouri­ng Girona as voting in a disputed referendum got under way.

The Madrid government and Spain’s Constituti­onal Court declared yesterday’s independen­ce vote to be illegal, and authoritie­s attempted to prevent polling stations from opening. That tactic, however, has failed, and Catalans turned out in large numbers to likely overwhelmi­ngly vote in favour of independen­ce.

At one polling station, where Carles Puigdemont, the leader of the Catalan regional assembly, was due to vote, police smashed their way in as they sought to prevent him from doing so. He wan’t there, and voted elsewhere in a move typical of the cat-and-mouse tactics of the past week in setting up the independen­ce vote.

Police also fired rubber bullets in central Barcelona, El Periodico newspaper reported, at the intersecti­on of two streets as violence erupted during the vote, which has thrown Spain into its worst constituti­onal crisis for decades.

Officers with riot shields jostled with hundreds of voters outside one station at a school in Barcelona as the crowd chanted: “We are people of peace!”

Armoured vans and an ambulance were parked nearby.

Catalan emergency services by 2pm local time were reporting that 460 people had been injured, with one man struck in the eye with a rubber bullet fired by the federal Guardia Civil police officers and requiring surgery.

‘Irresponsi­ble’

Barcelona’s football game with Las Palmas, scheduled for 4.15, appeared to be in doubt after the Canary Islands’ club members said they would wear a Spanish flag on their shirts in support of a unified Spain.

Puigdemont accused Spanish authoritie­s of using “unjustifie­d, disproport­ionate and irresponsi­ble” violence in the crackdown on the referendum.

The batons, rubber bullets and violence used by Spanish police to prevent voting in what Spanish authoritie­s have said was an illegal referendum had shown a “dreadful external image of Spain”, he told reporters.

“The unjustifie­d, disproport­ionate and irresponsi­ble violence of the Spanish state today has not only failed to stop Catalans’ desire to vote ... but has helped to clarify all the doubts we had to resolve today,” he said. At one polling station in northeaste­rn Barcelona, voters waited patiently for more than 90 minutes to cast their ballots, with the vast majority voting for independen­ce.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy had warned that the organisers of the referendum face prosecutio­n.

Some 700 mayors across

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 ?? AP ?? People cheer after voting at a school assigned to be a polling station at the Gracia neighbourh­ood in Barcelona yesterday.
AP People cheer after voting at a school assigned to be a polling station at the Gracia neighbourh­ood in Barcelona yesterday.
 ?? AP ?? Spanish National Police scuffles with people trying to reach a voting site in Barcelona.
AP Spanish National Police scuffles with people trying to reach a voting site in Barcelona.
 ?? AFP ?? Women show their vote — a resounding yes — before casting ballots at a polling station in Sant Julia de Ramis.
AFP Women show their vote — a resounding yes — before casting ballots at a polling station in Sant Julia de Ramis.

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