Gulf News

Spanish Guardia Civil are a disgrace

The actions of the police force in brutalisin­g voters in the Catalan referendum are inexcusabl­e

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ore than 800 people were hurt on Sunday as Spanish national police attempted to shut down polling stations and prevent voting from taking place in a disputed independen­ce referendum in Catalonia. Riot police used rubber bullets, batons and brute strength to force their way into polling stations, forcibly remove Catalonian­s who were attempting to vote. Shocking television images showed voters being hit, thrown to the ground, beaten and pulled by the hair from the polling stations.

Carles Puigdemont, the leader of the Catalan regional assembly, is leading a chorus of condemnati­on against the Guardia Civil for their brutality in trying to enforce the Madrid government’s opposition to the referendum, one that had been declared illegal by Spain’s Constituti­onal Court. Despite the heavy-handed interventi­on by the national police, voting went ahead across the region that’s based around Barcelona and represents one-fifth of Spain’s gross domestic product.

Initial results announced late on Sunday night showed 2.26 million Catalans cast ballots in the plebiscite, with 92 per cent voting in favour of independen­ce for the linguistic­ally and culturally distinct region. The scale of the result should be no surprise to Spanish authoritie­s given that most pro-Madrid supporters didn’t turn out to vote in a process that was considered to be both illegal and illegitima­te. But despite trying to disrupt and disparage the referendum process, the government in Madrid of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has now a bigger issue to deal with. The actions of his police officers are a damning indictment of his failure to defuse the Catalan process in the first instance. The images of Guardia Civil brutalisin­g peaceful citizens engaged in a democratic process is one that has tarnished the reputation of the force and of Spain itself.

For any Catalonian­s on the sidelines, the heavy-handed tactics have now fully polarised the region, and any trust that exists between Madrid and Barcelona has now been fully eroded at the end of police baton. Puigdemont will only be too willing to remind Catalonian­s that they have no alternativ­e now but to separate from a Madrid government that let loose its police on those who simply tried to vote. For Rajoy, who played hardball in the weeks before the referendum by threatenin­g prosecutio­n for those engaged in the process, he must bear the responsibi­lity for the actions of the Guardia Civil. He leads a democratic European nation, not a thirdworld dictatorsh­ip with goons in riot gear at his disposal to abuse and terrorise his citizens.

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