Albuquerque Journal

Peaceful protests for jailed rapper turn violent

Fringe groups clash with Spanish police in Barcelona

- BY JOSEPH WILSON AND HERNÁN MUÑOZ

BARCELONA, Spain —A fifth night of peaceful protests to denounce the imprisonme­nt of a Spanish rap artist once more devolved into clashes between police and the members of fringe groups who set up street barricades and smashed storefront windows Saturday night in downtown Barcelona.

Small groups made up mostly of young people began their nightly catand-mouse game with officers an hour after several thousand protesters gathered in the capital of Spain’s Catalonia region, which also was where the worst violence took place during earlier demonstrat­ions this week over rapper Pablo Hasél’s detention.

Police were also pelted by rocks after a march in the Catalan town of Lleida, where Hasél spent 24 hours barricaded in a university building before police took him away to serve a 9-month prison sentence for insulting the Spanish monarchy and praising terrorist violence in his music.

Catalonia’s regional police force said there also was defiance in the city of Tarragona, where groups threw glass bottles at police lines and smashed store windows.

Police reported at least 11 arrests from Saturday, including three minors. The worst of the rioting occurred on Barcelona’s Passeig de Gràcia, the city’s most fashionabl­e shopping boulevard home to art-deco apartment buildings considered architectu­ral treasures.

The mob worked its way up the street, smashing store front windows, toppling motorbikes, and mounting barricades with metal street barriers and burning trash containers to slow the police pursuit. Some even took the fight to police lines, forcing officers to use shields to protect them from hurled rocks. Police said that they had identified one “youth” for targeting a police helicopter with a laser for two hours.

After pouring out of armored vans, police wielded batons and fired foam bullets to disperse the groups.

The disorder appears have come a fringe group of mainly younger people who constitute­d a small share of the thousands of participan­ts who joined in marches to support Hasél and to oppose the Spanish laws used to prosecute him.

 ?? JOAN MATEU/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A demonstrat­or smashes a shop window during a protest condemning the arrest of rap singer Pablo Hasél in Barcelona, Spain, Saturday.
JOAN MATEU/ASSOCIATED PRESS A demonstrat­or smashes a shop window during a protest condemning the arrest of rap singer Pablo Hasél in Barcelona, Spain, Saturday.

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