San Francisco Chronicle

Catalans insist secession vote will go forward

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MADRID — Authoritie­s in Catalonia intend to ensure that a disputed referendum on independen­ce from Spain will take place peacefully Sunday despite a crackdown on the vote by the national government, the region’s interior chief said Thursday.

Minister Joaquin Forn said Catalan officials are determined to proceed with Sunday’s vote for the region of 7.5 million people in northeaste­rn Spain even though the central government in Madrid says referendum is illegal and can’t happen.

The Catalan government’s “commitment is very clear: People will be able to vote,” Forn said in Barcelona, the main city in Catalonia.

Forn met with regional and national security officials to defuse mounting tensions ahead of the ballot. In recent weeks, Spain’s Constituti­onal Court has ordered the ballot to be suspended and police have confiscate­d ballot papers and posters for it.

The Spanish Constituti­on refers in Article 2 to “the indissolub­le unity of the Spanish nation.”

The central government is deploying 10,000 police officers in Catalonia for the ballot, Forn said. He insisted, however, that the Catalan police force called the Mossos d’Esquadra must take their orders from local authoritie­s. The force’s loyalty has been torn between the central and regional government­s.

Earlier Thursday, Catalonia’s foreign affairs chief, Raul Romeva, called for the European Union to support the referendum, echoing an appeal by Catalan regional President Carles Puigdemont. He has accused the EU of “turning its back” on Catalonia in its conflict with Spain’s central government.

Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau also urged the EU to safeguard “fundamenta­l rights and freedoms in Catalonia” by mediating the standoff between Catalan officials and national officials in Madrid before Sunday’s planned vote.

“If Europe wants to have credibilit­y as a project, it needs to redirect this situation,” Colau said in an interview.

Thousands of striking Catalan university students, many carrying pro-independen­ce flags, marched in Barcelona to protest the central government crackdown on the ballot.

An internatio­nal media watchdog, meanwhile, rebuked the Catalan pro-independen­ce movement for placing undue pressure on journalist­s to present its side of the dispute. Reporters Without Borders said the regional government’s push to impose its side of the story in local, Spanish and internatio­nal media has “crossed red lines.”

The watchdog added that Spanish authoritie­s’ legal measures against Catalan media to stop the spread of informatio­n about the referendum have contribute­d to an atmosphere of extreme tension.

 ?? Samuel Aranda / New York Times ?? A student-led demonstrat­ion in Barcelona expresses support for the independen­ce referendum for Catalonia. Catalan officials say they intend to proceed with the vote, scheduled for Sunday.
Samuel Aranda / New York Times A student-led demonstrat­ion in Barcelona expresses support for the independen­ce referendum for Catalonia. Catalan officials say they intend to proceed with the vote, scheduled for Sunday.

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