The Columbus Dispatch

‘I’m not afraid!’ marchers chant after deadly attack

- By Francisco Seco and Hernan Munoz

BARCELONA, Spain — Hundreds of thousands of peace marchers flooded the heart of Barcelona on Saturday shouting “I’m not afraid” — a public rejection of violence following extremist attacks that killed 15 people, Spain’s deadliest in more than a decade.

Emergency workers, taxi drivers, police and ordinary citizens who helped immediatel­y after the attack on Aug. 17 in the city’s famed Las Ramblas boulevard led the march. They carried a streetwide banner with black capital letters reading “No Tinc Por,” which means “I’m not afraid” in the local Catalan language.

The phrase has grown from a spontaneou­s civic answer to violence into a slogan that Spain’s entire political class has unanimousl­y embraced.

Spain’s central, regional and local authoritie­s tried to send an image of unity Saturday by walking behind emergency workers, despite earlier criticism that national and regional authoritie­s had not shared informatio­n about the attackers well enough with each other.

In a first for a Spanish monarch, King Felipe VI joined a public demonstrat­ion, along with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and other Spanish and Catalan regional officials.

Still, some citizens whistled their displeasur­e as authoritie­s passed by and held banners criticizin­g the king’s role in promoting military exports to Saudi Arabia.

Barcelona police said some 500,000 people showed up to the march Saturday. People stand around a memorial filled with flowers, messages and candles on Barcelona’s historic Las Ramblas promenade Saturday as night falls following a demonstrat­ion condemning the attack there Aug. 17.

The Islamic State group has claimed the vehicle attacks in Barcelona and hours later in the coastal town of Cambrils that left 15 dead and over 120 wounded.

The investigat­ion into the Islamic extremist cell behind the attacks has shown that the group planned even more deadly carnage but accidently blew up a house in Alcanar where explosives were being built and gas tanks were being stored.

Eight suspects are dead, two are jailed under preliminar­y charges of terrorism and homicide and two more were freed by a judge but will remain under investigat­ion.

Medical authoritie­s said Saturday that 22 people wounded in the attacks are still being treated in hospitals. Six of them remain in critical condition.

In the northeaste­rn town of Ripoll, home for many of the attackers, members of the local Muslim community and other residents gathered Saturday in a central square to condemn the deadly attacks. Located at the foothills of the Pyrenees, the town is where most suspects came under the influence of a radical imam, investigat­ors say.

 ?? [MANU FERNANDEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHTOS] ?? A Spanish policewoma­n holds flowers offered by people at the end of a demonstrat­ion Saturday condemning the attack that killed 15 people and wounded 120 in Barcelona on Aug. 17.
[MANU FERNANDEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHTOS] A Spanish policewoma­n holds flowers offered by people at the end of a demonstrat­ion Saturday condemning the attack that killed 15 people and wounded 120 in Barcelona on Aug. 17.
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