Khaleej Times

Defiant Catalonia firm on independen­ce

- Reuters

barcelona — Catalan police tightened their protective ring around the region’s parliament on Tuesday where secessioni­sts have pledged a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce from Spain despite warnings from Madrid of swift counter-measures.

Regional leader Carles Puigdemont held a meeting of his cabinet to decide how to press an independen­ce drive that has stirred powerful emotions across Spain and raised fears of turmoil among European Union partner states.

Catalan police armed with automatic rifles guarded Barcelona’s Parc de la Ciutadella that houses the elegant 18th century parliament as it prepared to convene at 6pm). About 20 armoured Catalan police vans blocked every entrance to the park and the entrance to parliament itself was guarded by three armoured vans and officers wearing balaclavas.

Spanish national police, denounced by separatist­s for their use of force to hinder the region’s October 1 referendum, were not to be seen. However, the Spanish government was reinforcin­g security at airports and rail stations in Catalonia.

Pro-independen­ce activists were gathering around parliament, where big screens had been set up for them to watch proceeding­s. Farmers parked half a dozen

I want to ask Mr. Puigdemont not to do anything irreversib­le, not to take a path of no return, not to carry out any unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce and to return to legality Inigo Mendez de Vigo, Madrid government spokesman

tractors near the assembly, flying the separatist Catalan flag.

A declaratio­n of independen­ce would deepen Spain’s biggest political crisis since an attempted military coup in 1981 and would almost certainly draw a crackdown from Madrid, possibly including suspension of Catalonia’s autonomous government.

Both Spain’s government and European Council President Donald Tusk appealed to Puigdemont not to proclaim independen­ce.

“I ask you to respect, in your intentions, the constituti­onal order and not to announce a decision that would make such a dialogue impossible. Diversity should not, and need not, lead to conflict, whose consequenc­es would obviously be bad for the Catalans, for Spain and for the whole of Europe,” Tusk said in a speech in Brussels. —

 ??  ?? CRY FOR FREEDOM: A pro-independen­ce activist shouts slogans during a rally in Barcelona on Tuesday. —
CRY FOR FREEDOM: A pro-independen­ce activist shouts slogans during a rally in Barcelona on Tuesday. —

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