Spanish, Catalan leaders pressed to meet at table
Thousands of protesters demand negotiations amid secession threat.
BARCELONA, Spain — Thousands rallied in Madrid and Barcelona on Saturday in a last-ditch call for Spanish and Catalan leaders to stave off a national crisis amid Catalonia’s threat to secede.
The rallies in the Spanish capital and the Catalan city were held with the slogan “Shall We Talk?” in an effort to push lawmakers in both cities to end months of silence and start negotiating.
Catalonia’s regional president, Carles Puigdemont, has vowed to follow through on the results of the disputed Sept. 30 referendum on secession won by independence supporters. Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned that the vote was illegal and has promised that Catalonia is going nowhere.
Protesters packed Barcelona’s Sant Jaume Square, where the Catalan government has its presidential palace, shouting “We want to talk!” and holding signs saying “More Negotiation, Less Testosterone!” and “Talk or Resign!”
“We have to find a new way forward,” said Miquel Iceta, the leader of Spain’s Socialist party in Catalonia. “It’s the moment to listen to the people who are asking for the problem to be solved through an agreement, and without precipitated and unilateral decisions.”
The gathering around Madrid’s Cibeles fountain boasted a huge banner demanding that leaders start talking. Some people chanted “Less hate, and more understanding!”
In a separate rally in Madrid’s Colon Square, thousands clamored for the unity of Spain and against any attempt by the northeastern region to break away. The crowd bristled with Spanish flags. Prounion forces will try to generate momentum on Sunday in a protest in Barcelona.
Other protests asking for dialogue were held in cities including Valencia, Bilbao, Pamplona and Santiago de Compostela, news agency Europa Press reported.
The calls for dialogue and unity come after a traumatic week, with riot police storming several polling stations in an unsuccessful attempt to impede the referendum. Instead, hundreds of voters were left in need of medical attention.
Even though 2.2 million Catalans voted — with 90% backing independence — the referendum polled less than half of the region’s electorate. Puigdemont declared he would seek a declaration of independence in the regional parliament anyway.
The bloodied vote was followed by a strike by workers on Tuesday across Catalonia to protest the police violence.
Then came the stern message from Spain’s King Felipe VI that the Catalan government and parliament were breaking the law.
Puigdemont and his separatist supporters were struck a blow when Catalonia’s top two banks, CaixaBank and Banco Sabadell, as well as energy giant Gas Natural announced that they were relocating their headquarters from Catalonia to other parts of Spain.
Other companies are considering such a move to ensure that the region’s possible secession wouldn’t knock them out of the European Union and its lucrative common market.
Spain’s Minister of Public Works Inigo de la Serna said on Saturday that “the companies will keep leaving and it’s exclusively the fault of the members of the regional government.”
The warnings by the business sector have coincided with the first calls from within Puigdemont’s government to hold off on a declaration of independence.
Santi Vila, Catalonia’s regional chief for business, told Cadena SER Radio late Friday that he’s pushing for “a new opportunity for dialogue” with Spanish authorities.
“We have to give it one more chance, maybe the last chance, and perhaps the only way that can happen is to start with a cease-fire,” Vila said.
The most recent polls taken before the referendum showed that the region’s 7.5 million residents were roughly split on the issue.