Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After the vote

Spanish, European leaders say independen­ce vote not legal In Brussels, the European Commission’s chief spokesman said Monday that the Catalan plebiscite was “not legal” under the Spanish constituti­on, but he pressed the sides to talk and avoid violence.

- WILLIAM BOOTH Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Raul Gallego Abellan and Pamela Rolfe of

Independen­ce supporters march Monday during a demonstrat­ion in Barcelona, Spain. Catalan leaders accused Spanish police of brutality and repression during the region’s independen­ce referendum while the government said the security forces’ response was proportion­al.

BARCELONA — Hours after more than 2 million citizens in the Catalonia region voted overwhelmi­ngly in a controvers­ial, chaotic referendum to declare independen­ce from Spain, the secessioni­st leaders planned an emergency meeting to map out their next steps for establishi­ng a new nation.

The lopsided vote Sunday is likely to be vigorously challenged. Before the vote, Spanish courts and the central government in Madrid had declared the referendum illegitima­te and illegal.

According to the Catalan government, which announced the results early Monday, 90 percent of the ballots cast were for independen­ce, with 2,020,144 people voting yes and 176,566 no.

Turnout was low — just 42 percent. More than 2.2 million people were reported to have cast ballots, Catalan authoritie­s said, out of 5.3 million registered voters.

Many people in Catalonia who opposed independen­ce said they would not vote in the referendum, which they denounced as a sham.

Yet on Sunday night, just minutes after the first few thousand votes from a handful of towns were posted, Carles Puigdemont, the regional president and a leading secessioni­st, appeared onstage to announce that Catalonia had won “the right to independen­ce.” He called on Europe to support its split from Spain.

Puigdemont promised that he would present results to the Catalan parliament, which has previously said it would seek independen­ce if the vote supported it.

In a television address late Sunday, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said there was no real independen­ce vote in Catalonia. He said a majority of the region’s residents did not even show up at the polls.

On Monday, Rajoy said he would meet with the leaders of his party and others to plan a path forward.

In Brussels, the European Commission’s chief spokesman said Monday that the Catalan plebiscite was “not legal” under the Spanish constituti­on, but he pressed the sides to talk and avoid violence.

The vote left the region and nation deeply divided.

From thousands of windows in Madrid, people flew Spanish flags in a spontaneou­s display of support for unity.

For many residents of the capital, the referendum was perceived as public relations stunt.

Spanish TV featured a report showing how an anti-independen­ce activist was able to vote at four polling stations to demonstrat­e the apparent loose controls.

Puigdemont’s assertion that he would seek independen­ce — before the results were announced — was met with ridicule.

Another point repeated in the Madrid news media is that few voices in Catalonia publicly supported the “no” vote, allegedly because of bullying by independen­ce backers.

The fragmentat­ion of Catalan society and the “silent majority” are big themes in Madrid.

Spain’s Constituti­onal Court has ruled that the referendum was illegal, and it appeared likely that the plebiscite would again go before the judges.

The two sides could not even agree on facts. Catalan officials said 319 of about 2,300 polling stations were closed by police. Spain’s Interior Ministry said 92 stations were closed.

In Barcelona, trade unions and political parties called for a general strike today to protest alleged police brutality.

The plebiscite produced anxiety and shock across Europe, where many condemned the violence by the police but also worried that Catalan secessioni­sts were violating the constituti­on.

The secessioni­sts said Spain’s heavy-handed attempt to stop the referendum stirred memories of the country’s dark decades of dictatorsh­ip.

Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau called the day’s violence between police and civilians “a rupture” in society.

Jordi Turull, the spokesman for the Catalan regional government, described Spain’s use of police to suppress the vote as “the shame of Europe.”

Others in Spain saw a manipulati­ve propaganda play by secessioni­sts to stage a one-sided referendum designed to produce a “yes” vote no matter what.

“This was a sad day,” said Ines Arrimadas, a member of a center-right party in Catalonia who opposed the vote. “It was crazy to hold this referendum.”

She told Catalonia’s public broadcaste­r, which is staunchly pro-secession, that “on this TV broadcast you will believe the result, but no one on the outside will.”

Spain’s foreign minister, Alfonso Dastis, called the day’s violence “unpleasant” but “proportion­al.”

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AP/FELIPE DANA
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