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Catalonia declares independence from Spain, Madrid dismisses regional govt. and imposes direct rule

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Catalonia’s independence vote descends into chaos and clashes

BARCELONA, Spain — Catalonia’s defiant attempt to stage an independence referendum descended into chaos on Sunday, with hundreds injured in clashes with police in one of the gravest tests of Spain’s democracy since the end of the Franco dictatorship in the 1970s.

National police officers in riot gear, sent by the central government in Madrid from other parts of Spain, used rubber bullets and truncheons in some places as they fanned out across Catalonia, the restive northeastern region, to shut down polling stations and seize ballot boxes.

The clashes quickly spoiled what had been a festive, if expectant, atmosphere among voters, many of whom had camped inside polling stations and stayed on into late Sunday night, fearful that officers might seize ballot boxes.

By the day’s end, both sides were claiming victory. Voting went ahead in many towns and cities, with men and women, young and old, singing and chanting as they lined up for hours to cast ballots. Just after midnight, the Catalan government said that the referendum had been approved by 90 percent of some 2.3 million voters. Those figures could not be independently confirmed.

The Spanish government declared that the referendum had been disrupted.

More than 750 people were injured in the crackdown, Catalan officials said, while dozens of Spanish police officers were hurt, according to Spain’s interior ministry.

The day’s events left nothing clear except that the clashes over the status of the region — Spain’s economic powerhouse, where yearnings for a separate nation have ebbed and flowed for generations — had left supporters on both sides more hardened and polarized than before.

The Madrid government, with the backing of Spanish courts, had declared the referendum unconstitutional and ordered the vote suspended. But that did not stop Catalans from gathering before sunrise on Sunday, massing on rain-slicked streets across the region.

“Spain has shown us today its ugliest and darkest face, that which we really thought had disappeared 40 years ago,” said Mario Pulpillo, 54. “You simply can’t use violence against people who just want to vote.”

Despite the police threat, Mr. Pulpillo, who uses a wheelchair, said he went to vote “to make sure this was our feast of democracy, not our humiliation at the hands of a Spanish state that believes in repression.”

Voters like him made the turnout an extraordinary show of determination in the face of a steady drumbeat of threats from Madrid.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, at a news conference Sunday evening, characterized the police actions as a proper and measured response to the acts of secessionists. “We did what we had to do,” he said.

Proponents of the referendum immediately pointed to the heavy use of police force as a blight not only on Mr. Rajoy’s conservative government, but also on Spain’s still relatively young democracy.

“The image of the Spanish state has reached levels of shame that will stay with them forever,” the leader of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, told a crowd in the town of Sant Julià de Ramis, the scene of clashes.

“Today, the Spanish state has lost a lot more than it had already lost, and Catalan citizens have won a lot more than they had won until now,” he said.

He and other Catalan authorities maintained that balloting had proceeded in most of the polling stations and seemed determined to use the vote as further evidence of the legitimacy of their claim for a separate nation.

The Catalan vote has been watched with rising trepidation — and no sign of support — by a European Union wary of stoking forces of fragmentation already tugging at the bloc and many member states, where populist and nationalist parties have surged in recent elections.

Nationalism in Spain, a country with a long and painful 20th century history that included civil war and fascism, has been all but dormant since the coming of democracy after the death of the dictator Gen. Francisco Franco in 1975. There are already signs that Catalonia’s threat to fracture the country is changing that.

Because of the tensions Sunday, F.C. Barcelona, the soccer club, played a match behind closed doors in its Camp Nou stadium, where the opposing Spanish team came with special uniforms emblazoned with the Spanish flag — something unusual here.

Yet none of the tensions or lack of support — Scotland and Venezuela were among the few backers of the referendum — has dimmed aspirations for independence in Catalonia, a prosperous region with a distinct language, history and culture.

Those separatist passions rose in recent years as Catalans complained that Madrid was unfairly siphoning off their wealth and denying them the right to choose their own political destiny.

Spanish authorities accuse the separatist government of irresponsibly encouraging voters to violate Spanish law.

“If there is something to conclude from today, it is the strength of Spain’s democratic state,” Mr. Rajoy said on Sunday. “We have acted with the law and only with the law and we have shown that our democratic state has resources to defend itself against such a serious attack.”

Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría, Spain’s deputy prime minister, praised the Spanish police for blocking a vote that “couldn’t be celebrated and wasn’t celebrated.”

She told a news conference that the Catalan government had acted “with absolute irresponsibility, which had to be overcome by the professionalism of the security forces.”

After the extent of the crackdown became apparent, Ada Colau, the left-wing mayor of Barcelona, called on Mr. Rajoy to resign over his “cowardly” and unjustified police intervention.

“Today, we’re not talking about independence or not, but about a breakup between Mariano Rajoy and his government with Catalonia,” she told reporters.

Overnight, Catalans had used tractors to block police access to some rural municipalities so that the vote could go on. In other places, residents removed the doors of polling stations to ensure that the police could not bolt them on Sunday.

As Sunday approached, the Madrid government tried everything it could to thwart the referendum: disabling the internet, confiscating ballots, detaining some officials and threatening scores more with prosecution.

The vote took place anyway in an atmosphere of cat and mouse and in improvised conditions, with a disputed census used as the voting list.

Catalan officials instead relied on privately printed ballots, and changed the voting rules an hour before polls were scheduled to open, to allow voters to cast a ballot at any poll station, without using an envelope and whether registered there or not.

Enric Millo, the Spanish government’s representative in Catalonia, said the last-minute change turned what was already an illegal referendum into “a joke.”

Mr. Millo deplored the fact the national police were forced to take over from Catalan police officers who failed to stop the voting. “We’re being forced to do what we didn’t want to do,” he said.

Some videos posted on social media even showed arguments and some tussling between Spanish national police and the Catalan police.

The Catalan police also intervened in Barcelona’s main downtown square to prevent clashes between separatists and a small group of far-right partisans of Spain.

A few outsiders had traveled to Catalonia from other countries to act as observers, saying they wanted to make sure that the police did not use force against voters.

Dimitrij Rupel, a former foreign minister of Slovenia, led a delegation of 35 foreign officials invited by the Catalan government. After watching the police intervene, he said that the “police have nothing to do with the democratic process — they shouldn’t be here.”

Recent opinion polls suggest that slightly less than half of Catalonia’s 7.5 million people support separation from Spain, but separatist parties won a majority in the region’s Parliament in 2015 and their influence has grown.

Many say Catalonia would face a perilous and uncertain future outside Spain, the market for most of the region’s goods, and would not be assured of being readmitted to the European Union.

Others complained that the thrust for independence had deepened divisions within the region, whose vibrant economy has attracted families from inside and outside Spain.

Olga Noheda, a doctor in Centelles, said one of her patients, an older man, began crying in her examination room, and explained that his granddaughter had begun expressing dislike for Spaniards.

“He was very sad, because he didn’t understand where it all came from,” she said. “He migrated to Catalonia many years ago, from Seville, and he was wondering if his granddaughter was aware that he was a Spaniard.”

In Barcelona’s Placa de Catalunya late Sunday night, voters chanted and celebrated the referendum, even if it remained very unclear how the separatist leaders hope to enforce its outcome.

“We’ve shown our way of making politics and changing things is very different to that of Spain,” said Marti Feliu, 21, a history student at Barcelona University. “It’s our opportunity to create a different kind of country, even if we don’t yet know exactly how and when.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/01/world/europe/catalonia-independence-referendum.html
 
I think the Basque movement has slowly died down since ETA put their arms down.

But the Catalonian one has def sprung up because of the awful police action Yesterday.

I don't understand Spanish governments heavy tactics - you are only going to alienate people further when apparently only a minority wanted independence in the first place.
 
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It’s our opportunity to create a different kind of country, even if we don’t yet know exactly how and when.

Sums its up for me,idealistic and chaotic, Catalonia enjoys much freedom compared to many autonomous provinces,but this is what unemployment above 20% does.
 
The seeds have been planted. And now they will start to germinate. The roots of a terrorist campaign and/or a civil war will now start to form and spread. The way the Spanish government has used force and other tactics to try and prevent the vote taking place has alienated even those Catalonians who were against independence.
 
Spain is the country that I am looking forward to visiting the most along with France. Such a rich history and just so much to see.
 
Speaks volumes about these supposed developed european countries where mere two culturally distinct groups cant coexist together.Compared that to subcontinent which is home to probably hundereds of different ethnic and linguistic groups and yet still manages to survive despite being a third world dump.
 
I think the Basque movement has slowly died down since ETA put their arms down.

But the Catalonian one has def sprung up because of the awful police action Yesterday.

I don't understand Spanish governments heavy tactics - you are only going to alienate people further when apparently only a minority wanted independence in the first place.

A minority does not want independence. I was in Barcelona and I never seen one Spanish flag but only Catalonia flags. A lot of people want independence. I am going Barca in a few days; not great timing :/
 
Consistently the polls had the pro independence side polling at around 40% so why not just let a vote go ahead like the UK did with Scotland?

Instead, through their OTT reaction, they’ve just done a great recruiting job for the pro independence side.

Well done Spanish government.
 
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Consistently the polls had the pro independence side polling at around 40% so why not just let a vote go ahead like the UK did with Scotland?

Instead, through their OTT reaction, they’ve just done a great recruiting job for the pro independence side.

Well done Spanish government.

Don't trust these polls; there is a reason why they don't want a referdum to happen.
 
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Speaks volumes about these supposed developed european countries where mere two culturally distinct groups cant coexist together.Compared that to subcontinent which is home to probably hundereds of different ethnic and linguistic groups and yet still manages to survive despite being a third world dump.

Spain's tactics don't even come close to what India does to secessionists in Kashmir, Pakistan in Balochistan and what Sri Lanka did in their northwest. If Spain did even a fraction of that, you'd have a point but this comparison is pretty laughable right now.
 
Spain's tactics don't even come close to what India does to secessionists in Kashmir, Pakistan in Balochistan and what Sri Lanka did in their northwest. If Spain did even a fraction of that, you'd have a point but this comparison is pretty laughable right now.

The secessionists in Spain don't even do a fraction of what the secessionists in Kashmir do. Just check the pro Indian supporters in Kashmir who are regularly gunned down
 
The secessionists in Spain don't even do a fraction of what the secessionists in Kashmir do. Just check the pro Indian supporters in Kashmir who are regularly gunned down

Off course, those Kashmiris are the devil incarnate. Those poor pro Indian Kashmiris and their army of peace, armed with slingshots, who keep getting killed and raped by Kashmiris on a daily basis. I completely understand, my sympathies to the helpless pro Indian Kashmiris and their army.
 
Off course, those Kashmiris are the devil incarnate. Those poor pro Indian Kashmiris and their army of peace, armed with slingshots, who keep getting killed and raped by Kashmiris on a daily basis. I completely understand, my sympathies to the helpless pro Indian Kashmiris and their army.
No bro, but let's not paint as if only one side uses violence for their means. The violence btw was started by the secessionists with active assistance from your military. Good luck getting us to back off now
 
No bro, but let's not paint as if only one side uses violence for their means. The violence btw was started by the secessionists with active assistance from your military. Good luck getting us to back off now

The army backed off a long time ago. I say this as someone who despises Pakistan Army with every fiber of my being and would not let go of an opportunity to condemn them if they were guilty of something. Regardless, there's a way to keep the peace and the Indian Army's activities in Kashmir is not how it's done. I can't make you back off but if you're proud of what they're doing their, judging from the 'back off' statement, that's your cross to bear.
 
The army backed off a long time ago. I say this as someone who despises Pakistan Army with every fiber of my being and would not let go of an opportunity to condemn them if they were guilty of something. Regardless, there's a way to keep the peace and the Indian Army's activities in Kashmir is not how it's done. I can't make you back off but if you're proud of what they're doing their, judging from the 'back off' statement, that's your cross to bear.
I find it difficult to sympathise with a group which actively kills people who are pro India, has killed and driven out a significant chunk of minorities within their lands and give flimsy excuses to let them back, has not given citizenship rights to partition era refugees solely based on their religion and regularly carries out terrorist attacks against pilgrims visiting their state. Backing such people and whitewashing their actions is your cross to bear
 
I find it difficult to sympathise with a group which actively kills people who are pro India, has killed and driven out a significant chunk of minorities within their lands and give flimsy excuses to let them back, has not given citizenship rights to partition era refugees solely based on their religion and regularly carries out terrorist attacks against pilgrims visiting their state. Backing such people and whitewashing their actions is your cross to bear

Having been exposed to nationalist propaganda from the military all my life, pardon me for taking those claims with a grain of salt since that's exactly how our side justifies their actions and the gulf between the ground realities and the official line is massive to say the least. Anyhow, like I said before, if you're proud of what the Indian army is doing, that's your cross to bear.
 
Spain's tactics don't even come close to what India does to secessionists in Kashmir, Pakistan in Balochistan and what Sri Lanka did in their northwest. If Spain did even a fraction of that, you'd have a point but this comparison is pretty laughable right now.

But even then there are literally hundereds of ethnic groups residing in India alone and some of which for eg a Tamilian and a Naga have absolutely nothing in common with each other and yet we all somehow manage to stick together.Of course there would be few exceptions such as Kashmir but that isnt surprising considering the poor state of this region which is hugely in contrast with Spain which is a developed country by all parameters.
 
Having been exposed to nationalist propaganda from the military all my life, pardon me for taking those claims with a grain of salt since that's exactly how our side justifies their actions and the gulf between the ground realities and the official line is massive to say the least. Anyhow, like I said before, if you're proud of what the Indian army is doing, that's your cross to bear.
Feel free to dispute, would love to read the other side
 
Spain is the country that I am looking forward to visiting the most along with France. Such a rich history and just so much to see.

It's a beatiful country with so many historic areas. Granada and Barcelona are my favourite places in Spain.

Catalonia are unhappy it's a very rich area but suffered along with the rest of Spain after the big economic crash a few years ago.

They shouldn't have set up their own referendum when it means nothing. This will only create terrorism and disorder in Spain now.
 
It's a beatiful country with so many historic areas. Granada and Barcelona are my favourite places in Spain.

Catalonia are unhappy it's a very rich area but suffered along with the rest of Spain after the big economic crash a few years ago.

They shouldn't have set up their own referendum when it means nothing. This will only create terrorism and disorder in Spain now.

These are precisely two places along with Paris that I want to visit most. Granada has a unique combination of European and Islamic art which fascinates me. And Barca has Gaudi. Nuff said! Hopefully nothing will be ruined by political circus.
 
It's like KPK passing a billing in provincial assembly to have a referendum without Pakistan government or Parliament being involved. UK made a deal with Scotland Parliament to hold the referendum.
 
Spain's tactics don't even come close to what India does to secessionists in Kashmir, Pakistan in Balochistan and what Sri Lanka did in their northwest. If Spain did even a fraction of that, you'd have a point but this comparison is pretty laughable right now.

They've already done there fair share of killing, suppressing and exploitation during the colonial era, and if they face even a fraction of what India faces in Kashmir, they'll come down just as hard as India if not more. It is hilarious to see people cite these western countries as some sort of model for a moral and just society while berating the developing countries on their human rights record. The whole western civilization is built on exploiting, looting and raping the so called third world.
 
It's like KPK passing a billing in provincial assembly to have a referendum without Pakistan government or Parliament being involved. UK made a deal with Scotland Parliament to hold the referendum.

Yes but otherwise Catalonia will never have the rights to hold a legal referendum as a minority.
 
I was in Barcelona 3 days ago and got to witness a peaceful protest where the public started making tumbler noice at 10pm for almost 15 minutes
 
Don't trust these polls; there is a reason why they don't want a referdum to happen.

They’ve had their own devolved parliament in Catalonia since 1980 and at the last election the pro independence coalition only got 39.6% of the vote.
 
They’ve had their own devolved parliament in Catalonia since 1980 and at the last election the pro independence coalition only got 39.6% of the vote.

Even underage kids were allowed to vote in this, reports of people voting multiple times.
 
They’ve had their own devolved parliament in Catalonia since 1980 and at the last election the pro independence coalition only got 39.6% of the vote.

that doesnt mean that only 39.6% of the people WANT independence

in a strauht 'yes. no' poll numbers would be much higher
 
Yes but otherwise Catalonia will never have the rights to hold a legal referendum as a minority.

So be it but you need Central Government approval otherwise territories like Basque Country, Flanders etc will start doing referendum by themselves. This referendum has no legitimacy

India will never give up Kashmir, this is Catalonia that contributes 20% of total GDP of Spain. No way Spain is going to let this go by any means. They will even put an army to stop this separation if the situation arises, and NO EU or UN commission will intervene.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Catalonia will declare independence from Spain in a matter of days, region's leader Carles Puigdemont tells the BBC <a href="https://t.co/wDEuPLLmT7">https://t.co/wDEuPLLmT7</a></p>— BBC Breaking News (@BBCBreaking) <a href="https://twitter.com/BBCBreaking/status/915315185644077061?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 3, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
So be it but you need Central Government approval otherwise territories like Basque Country, Flanders etc will start doing referendum by themselves. This referendum has no legitimacy

India will never give up Kashmir, this is Catalonia that contributes 20% of total GDP of Spain. No way Spain is going to let this go by any means. They will even put an army to stop this separation if the situation arises, and NO EU or UN commission will intervene.

Central governments approval means nothing when the people of Catalonia consider themselves to be distinct from the rest of Spain. Using force will only only make the situation worse. I am flying out to Barca tomorrow so will keep this thread updated.
 
Catalonia will pull itself offline and declare independence over the weekend then.

This is going to result in a civil war.
 
There won't be a civil war. People do not have guns here, like USA for example.

The seeds have been planted. And now they will start to germinate. The roots of a terrorist campaign and/or a civil war will now start to form and spread. The way the Spanish government has used force and other tactics to try and prevent the vote taking place has alienated even those Catalonians who were against independence.
[MENTION=4930]Yossarian[/MENTION] There won't be a terrorist campaign or civil war. There are no external forces involved since Catalonia doesn't have oil or other resources that can be exploited. Ger/Fra won't ever let that happen.
 
Speaks volumes about these supposed developed european countries where mere two culturally distinct groups cant coexist together.Compared that to subcontinent which is home to probably hundereds of different ethnic and linguistic groups and yet still manages to survive despite being a third world dump.

Maybe it's becuasew for people living in this dump food, shelter and survival matter more than separate homeland and stuff. And also no single Indian ethino-linguistic group can survive independently , we are too interdependent on each other .
 
Maybe it's becuasew for people living in this dump food, shelter and survival matter more than separate homeland and stuff. And also no single Indian ethino-linguistic group can survive independently , we are too interdependent on each other .
Relative tbh. Can understand why someone from Kerala, thinks India is a dump. Pity your experience
 
Relative tbh. Can understand why someone from Kerala, thinks India is a dump. Pity your experience

I was responding to one poster mentioning the whole subcontinent as a dump. I don't know how you managed to find regionalism in it :100: .. Anyway as far as cleanliness, road manners and basic etiquette or decency go, most of India is a dump anyway. Being from any state makes very little difference when compared to other cultures outside our nation.
 
One downside will be we may not get to see Barca vs Real El Classico atleast twice a year.
 
One downside will be we may not get to see Barca vs Real El Classico atleast twice a year.

even if it happens im sure theyll find a compromise for barca to stay in la liga

most certainly catalunya wont have its own league

its team will either play in spain or france
 
You cannot be independent country unless you control your borders. So do they have the police & numbers to tackle Spanish authorities? It's still early days in their battle I feel....
 
There won't be a civil war. People do not have guns here, like USA for example.

[MENTION=4930]Yossarian[/MENTION] There won't be a terrorist campaign or civil war. There are no external forces involved since Catalonia doesn't have oil or other resources that can be exploited. Ger/Fra won't ever let that happen.
Don't be so naive. The Catalonians feel that they have been treated badly by the rest of Madrid centric Spain.

For “independistas,” the fight for freedom has been a three-century project, one that can be traced back to 1714, when Philip V of Spain captured Barcelona. (Even today, pro-independence Catalonians insult Spanish loyalists by calling them “botiflers,” or allies of Philip V.)

Since then, Catalonian nationalists have consistently pursued some degree of autonomy from Spain. By 1932, the region's leaders had declared a Catalan Republic, and the Spanish government agreed on a state of autonomy.

But when Francisco Franco came to power in 1939, those gains were lost. Franco systematically repressed all efforts toward Catalan nationalism. Under his dictatorship, the New York Times writes, “the government tried to stamp out all Catalan institutions and the language, and thousands of people were executed in purges. Virtually no Catalan family emerged from that period unscarred.”

After Franco died, the fight for independence started again in earnest. In 2006, Spain granted Catalonia “nation” status and taxation power. But Spain's Constitutional Court struck down this ruling in 2010, arguing that while Catalans were a “nationality,” Catalonia was not a “nation.” More than 1 million Catalonians protested the finding, to no avail.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ence-referendum-spain/?utm_term=.f8c2fe42d5cc

Did you see the violence against the Catalanians by the police brought in by the government from other parts of the country? Even those who were against independence have been horrified by the antics of the Spanish government and have now become in favour of independence.

If the Spanish government refuses to even contemplate discussions and some sort of compromise, and the anger and the hatred of the Spanish keeps building up, all it takes is a few hotheads to go off the rails and do something stupid, followed by an even more stupid reaction by the Spanish government, and suddenly poof! Things can get out of control very easily. Thats how internal conflicts and civil wars start. I'm not saying there will be a civil war. I'm saying there's a potential for, and possibility of, conflict leading to civil war.
 
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even if it happens im sure theyll find a compromise for barca to stay in la liga

most certainly catalunya wont have its own league

its team will either play in spain or france

like Monaco FC plays in Ligue 1
 
I am in Barcelona now, majority want independence here. The raid by Spanish police have peeved off people here.
 
After the Catalans voted for independence in a referendum held by the regional government of the semi-autonomous region of Catalonia of Spain (Barcelona being it's main city), a referendum declared illegal by the Spanish government based in Madrid, the Catalan Prime Minister declared independence from Spain after a vote in the Catalan regional Parliament.

But within an hour, the Spanish Senate voted to dismiss the Catalan regional government and impose direct rule.

Get ready for another Spanish Civil War?
 
Catalan parliament votes to declare independence from Spain. And the Spanish senate approves direct rule in Catalonia to suppress this uprising.

What will happen to Barcelona FC now? Pique and Ramos are already locking horns over this. :(
 
Spain's Supreme Court is expected to issue a verdict in the trial of Catalan separatist leaders over their role in an independence referendum in 2017.

Spain has deployed more police in Catalonia, amid fears that a guilty ruling could spark more protests in the wealthy north-eastern region.

The 12 politicians and activists face charges ranging from rebellion to sedition and misuse of public funds.

They all deny the charges. Nine of them could face jail sentences.

Separatists in Catalonia are planning mass civil disobedience if they are not acquitted.

There were clashes between police and protesters two years ago, when Catalonia's pro-independence leaders went ahead with a referendum ruled illegal by Spain's constitutional court.

During closing arguments in June, defence lawyers told the court their clients denied the charges of rebellion and sedition, but admitted to the lesser charge of disobedience, which could have seen them banned from public office - but avoid prison.

While the court is said to have ruled out convicting the 12 of the most serious charge of rebellion, the possibility of prison terms remains. The lesser charge of sedition, which does not involve encouraging violence, can still result in up to 12 years in jail.

Who are the 12 Catalan leaders?
Some held prominent positions in Catalonia's government and parliament, others were influential activists and cultural advocates.

Following four months of hearings, the 12 defendants were each given 15 minutes to present their arguments to prosecutors on the final day of the trial on 12 June.

They told the court in Madrid that they were victims of an injustice in a trial built on "false" charges.

Oriol Junqueras, former vice-president of Catalonia and highest-ranking pro-independence leader on trial: "Voting and defending the republic from a parliament cannot be a crime."
Jordi Cuixart, president of Catalan language and culture organisation Òmnium Cultural: "What we did on 1 October [holding the 2017 referendum] was an exercise of collective dignity."
Carme Forcadell, ex-speaker of the Catalan parliament: "I didn't take part in any strategy, I restricted myself to fulfilling my duties as parliament speaker."
Jordi Turull, former Catalan government spokesman: "We weren't looking to involve people [in the bid for independence], that already existed, and so a political solution had to be provided."
Joaquim Forn, former Catalan interior minister: "I defended the referendum as a politician, but told Catalan police to follow court orders."
Jordi Sànchez, activist and ex-president of the Catalan National Assembly: "I am the victim of an injustice - there are no ideas or principles that should be silenced."
Raül Romeva, former external relations minister: "There is no international treaty prohibiting the right to self-determination. Not even the Spanish Constitution."
Dolors Bassa, ex-labour minister: "It was always clear to us that if a lot of people turned out to vote, it would help us when negotiating [with Madrid]... independence was always seen as something to be agreed."
Josep Rull, former territorial minister: "People vote and it's good that parties deliver... our manifesto was not challenged in court."
Carles Mundó, former justice minister: "The vote was not paid for with public funds, I saw [it] as a political protest."
Meritxell Borràs, former governance minister: "[The vote was] a political expression [that] held no legal consequences."
Santi Vila, former business minister: "I saw the referendum as a political protest."
Nine of the defendants have already spent months in pre-trial detention. The remaining three were released on bail.

Jailed Speaker takes Spain to rights court
Catalan 'rebellion' trial puts Spain's courts to the test
Carles Puigdemont, the former Catalan president, escaped trial after fleeing Spain in late October 2017 before he could be arrested, along with four others.

What were the accusations?
Prosecutors argued that the unilateral declaration of independence was an attack on the Spanish state and accused some of those involved of a serious act of rebellion.

Defendants also faced the accusation of misuse of public funds in organising the 2017 referendum.

Prosecutors say the leaders carried out a "perfectly planned strategy... to break the constitutional order and obtain the independence of Catalonia" illegally.

Ms Forcadell, the former parliament speaker who read out the independence result on 27 October 2017, was also accused of allowing parliamentary debates on independence despite warnings from Spain's Constitutional Court.

Some of the accused, speaking to the BBC ahead of the trial, said the proceedings were political in nature. Any violence, they said, was on the part of police and was committed against voters in a crackdown which made headlines around the world.

Three weeks after the banned 2017 vote, the Catalan parliament declared an independent republic.

Madrid stepped in to impose its rule on the region, and several Catalan leaders fled or were arrested.

What is behind the Catalonia controversy?
Catalan nationalists have long complained that their region, which has a distinct history dating back almost 1,000 years, sends too much money to poorer parts of Spain, as taxes are controlled by Madrid.

The wealthy region is home to about 7.5 million people, with their own language, parliament, flag and anthem.

In September, a march in Barcelona in support of Catalonia's independence from Spain drew crowds of about 600,000 people - one of the lowest turnouts in the eight-year history of the annual rally.

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49974289.
 
Catalan protests: Region's president urges immediate halt to violence

The president of Spain's Catalonia region has called for an immediate halt to violence, as protests continued for a third night.

"We condemn violence... This has to stop right now," Quim Torra said.

On Wednesday, protesters set up burning barricades and hurled projectiles at police in Barcelona, the capital of the autonomous region in the north-east.

Monday's sentencing of nine separatist leaders triggered protests in support of Catalonia's independence.

Protesters have reportedly been using an app known as Tsunami Democratic, which directs them to protest sites in Catalan cities.

The Spanish authorities say they are investigating who is co-ordinating the disruption.

What did the Catalan president say?
In a televised statement, Mr Torra said: "We will not permit incidents like those we are seeing in the streets.

"This has to stop right now. There is no reason nor justification for burning cars, nor any other vandalism."

Mr Torra, who advocates independence for Catalonia, was speaking after Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez had made a direct appeal to him to condemn the violence.

Pro-independence leaders - who control the Catalan regional government - said earlier they would keep pushing for a new referendum on secession from Spain.

Why are people protesting?
The protests began after nine Catalan independence leaders were handed jail sentences of between nine and 13 years by Spain's Supreme Court on Monday.

The separatists were convicted of sedition over their role in an independence referendum in 2017, which Spain said was illegal.

Another three were found guilty of disobedience and fined, but not jailed. All 12 defendants denied the charges.

On Monday, thousands of protesters blocked roads to Barcelona's El Prat airport - a major transport hub.

More than 100 flights were cancelled as demonstrators fought running battles with riot police at the terminal buildings.

What is behind the Catalonia unrest?
Catalan nationalists have long complained that their region, which has a distinct history dating back almost 1,000 years, sends too much money to poorer parts of Spain, through taxes which are controlled by Madrid.

The wealthy region is home to about 7.5 million people, with their own language, parliament, flag and anthem.

In September, a march in Barcelona in support of Catalonia's independence from Spain drew crowds of about 600,000 people - one of the lowest turnouts in the eight-year history of the annual rally.

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50077595.
 
BARCELONA: Catalan separatists were back out on the streets again on Thursday, with students rallying as they kicked-off a two-day strike and thousands more pressing on with a long cross-country march towards Barcelona.

Around 25,000 striking students and their supporters took part in a midday rally outside of Barcelona city hall, according to municipal police.

Activists blocked several roads across Catalonia by burning tyres while the commuter rail service in Barcelona was intermittently disrupted due to demonstrators on the tracks, officials said. Several roads and highways were also blocked off due to the mass marches which departed on Wednesday from five Catalan towns heading for Barcelona.

Their aim is to converge on the Catalan capital on Friday when separatists have called a general strike and a big demonstration to protest the Supreme Court’s decision to jail nine separatist leaders for their role in a referendum banned by Madrid and a short-lived declaration of independence.

Another protest has been called for Thursday evening by the radical CDR group. Announced on Monday morning, the verdict has sparked three days of large-scale demonstrations which have turned increasingly violent with separatist activists engaged in nighttime clashes with riot police in Barcelona and elsewhere.

Overnight, protesters in Barcelona set fire to cars and large wheelie bins, overturned metal barriers and threw firecrackers at police, who pushed back with batons and shields. Emergency services said 58 people were injured, including a 17-year-old who was hit by a police van.

Police have arrested 97 people across Catalonia since the protests began, Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said on Thursday. “We are experiencing episodes of great violence in Catalonia carried out by minority groups which are perfectly organised,” he said.

With further protests planned for Thursday night, the minister vowed there would be “no impunity” for those involved in violence.

Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1511516/students-rally-en-masse-in-catalonia-after-night-of-unrest.
 
Fresh clashes between riot police and protesters have broken out in Barcelona amid anger over the jailing of Catalan separatist leaders.

A general strike was announced and five huge marches, all peaceful, converged on the city centre, bringing the streets to a standstill.

Police estimated that more than 500,000 people had joined Friday's rallies.

Protesters also blocked a motorway on the Spain-France border, causing huge tailbacks.

There were 17 arrests across the region on Friday, Spanish newspaper El Pais reported, and 62 people were injured - 41 of them in Barcelona.

Catalan regional leader Quim Torra thanked those who had demonstrated peacefully and criticised the rioters.

He said the sentences handed down to separatist leaders would not deter the campaign for independence.

"We'll return to the ballot box again on self-determination," he said.

Speaking in Brussels, acting Spanish Prime Minster Pedro Sanchez warned that those who caused disturbances would face justice.

"There is no space for impunity in relation to the serious acts of violence we have witnessed over recent days in different cities in Catalonia," he said.

Fernando Grande-Marlaska, Spain's acting interior minister, said there had been nearly 130 arrests since trouble broke out across Catalonia five days ago. He warned that rioters faced up to six years in prison.

What is the latest?
Masked protesters confronted officers near the national police headquarters in Barcelona late on Friday, throwing stones and cans at lines of officers in riot gear. Rubbish bins were dragged into the streets and set alight.

Police responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon, reports said.

Further north, Catalan police closed the motorway at La Jonquera on the French border as about 200 protesters occupied the road. Demonstrators blocked at least 20 major roads across the region, reports said.

Earlier, Barcelona's Sagrada Familia church - one of the city's main tourist attractions - was closed after protesters blocked its entrance. In a statement posted on its official Twitter account, the church said a group of protesters was standing at the entrance and interfering with access to the interior.

Meanwhile, Barcelona and Real Madrid football teams postponed a match they were due to play on 26 October.

The famous Spanish rivals had been set to meet in El Clásico - a hugely popular fixture due to be held at Barcelona's stadium - but postponed it because of fears of civil unrest.

Why are people protesting?
The Supreme Court decision on Monday to jail nine Catalan separatist leaders for between nine and 13 years set off some of the worst street violence Spain has seen for decades.

At least 96 people were hurt as the protests spread across Spain's north-eastern region.

The separatists were convicted of sedition over their role in a 2017 referendum outlawed by the Spanish courts and a subsequent declaration of independence. Another three were found guilty of disobedience and fined but not jailed. All 12 defendants denied the charges.

Former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont is still wanted by the Spanish authorities for his role in the referendum. He currently resides in Belgium. If he returns to Spain, he will be arrested.

What is behind the Catalonia unrest?
Catalan nationalists have long complained that their region, which has a distinct history dating back almost 1,000 years, sends too much money to poorer parts of Spain via taxes which are controlled by Madrid.

The wealthy region is home to about 7.5 million people, with their own language, parliament, flag and anthem.

In September, a march in Barcelona in support of Catalonia's independence from Spain drew crowds of about 600,000 people - one of the lowest turnouts in the eight-year history of the annual rally.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50098268.
 
The president of Spain's Catalonia region has said he will push for a new independence referendum, as protests continued into a fourth day.

Quim Torra said another independence vote should go ahead within two years.

He has condemned violence which saw protesters clash with riot police after nine separatist leaders were jailed for their role in a failed push for independence.

At least ninety-six people have been hurt across the region.

Demonstrators were detained in Barcelona, Lleida, Tarragona and Girona on Wednesday night as the protests spread across Spain's north-east region.

Protesters have reportedly been using an app known as Tsunami Democràtic, which directs them to protest sites in Catalan cities.

The Spanish authorities say they are investigating who is co-ordinating the disruption. Mr Torra blamed "infiltrators" but government spokeswoman Isabel Celaá described those instigating the violence as "co-ordinated young Catalans" whose actions were not improvised.

Barricades were set alight and petrol bombs thrown as riots gripped the centre of Barcelona.

Skip Twitter post by @AUGC_ComunicaEnd of Twitter post by @AUGC_Comunica
Police released footage of a firework fired at one of their helicopters flying over demonstrators in Barcelona.

Thousands of people have joined a series of "marches for freedom", which are set to converge in the Catalan capital on Friday.

What did the Catalan president say?
Speaking in the Catalan parliament, Mr Torra said that the sentences handed down to Catalan leaders would not stop a second vote from going ahead.

"We'll return to the ballot box again on self-determination. If all parties and groups make it possible, we have to be able to finish this legislative term by validating independence," he said.

The Catalan parliament's term ends in December 2021.

Spain's Constitutional Court has warned Catalan officials of the legal consequences if they break the law by pursuing independence.

Mr Torra also called for an end to the violence. He said: "We will not permit incidents like those we are seeing in the streets.

"This has to stop right now. There is no reason nor justification for burning cars, nor any other vandalism."

Mr Torra, who advocates independence for Catalonia, was speaking after Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez had made a direct appeal to him to condemn the violence.

Mr Torra also condemned the long jail sentences handed down to leading separatist figures on Monday as a "direct attack on fundamental rights".

He appealed to the prime minister to "face up to the conflict as democracies do - by speaking to and giving voice to the citizens".

Why are people protesting?
The protests began after nine pro-independence leaders were jailed for between nine and 13 years by Spain's Supreme Court.

The separatists were convicted of sedition over their role in an independence referendum in 2017 which was declared illegal by the Spanish courts.

Another three were found guilty of disobedience and fined but not jailed. All 12 defendants denied the charges.

Former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont is still wanted by the Spanish authorities for his role in the referendum.

He currently resides in Belgium. If he returns to Spain, he will be arrested.

On Wednesday, it emerged that he is threatening to take legal action against Canada after his visa application was rejected days before he was set to address a group advocating Quebec independence.

On Monday, thousands of protesters blocked roads to Barcelona's El Prat airport - a major transport hub.

More than 100 flights were cancelled as demonstrators fought running battles with riot police at the terminal buildings.

What is behind the Catalonia unrest?
Catalan nationalists have long complained that their region, which has a distinct history dating back almost 1,000 years, sends too much money to poorer parts of Spain via taxes which are controlled by Madrid.

The wealthy region is home to about 7.5 million people, with their own language, parliament, flag and anthem.

In September, a march in Barcelona in support of Catalonia's independence from Spain drew crowds of about 600,000 people - one of the lowest turnouts in the eight-year history of the annual rally.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50077595.
 
The Spanish supreme court’s deeply unjust verdict, handing out harsh prison sentences to nine Catalan government and civil society leaders for organising a peaceful referendum on self-determination in Catalonia, is for many the sign of a country slipping towards authoritarianism and away from western European-style democracy. But truth be told, for us Basques, this kind of behaviour is nothing new.

For years Spain was able to disguise its undemocratic essence under the cloak of the “fight against Basque terrorism”. Denial and rejection of the political nature of the armed conflict in the Basque country became quite easy for them, especially after 9/11. The line was that there was not a political problem in Spain, just a criminal one. “Spain is a democracy,” they used to tell us. “Everything is possible without violence” was the repeated mantra. We still remember the words of Spanish home secretary Alfredo P Rubalcaba: “They must decide: bombs or votes.”

Yet when some of us in the pro-independence Basque movement began to convince those who still believed in violence to continue our struggle for self-determination by peaceful and democratic means, we were arrested and sentenced to lengthy jail terms.

The truth is that Basque violence ended –not thanks to Spanish government efforts – but in spite of its persistent obstructions. (It is probably important here to clarify my position: many wrongs were done by the Basque side, many things happened that should not have done. We have acknowledged our share of the blame for the violence that was committed by both sides during years of conflict). My arrest – along with others – happened 10 years before the Catalan politicians were convicted of sedition, and it was only after we had served our prison term that the European court of human rights ruled our trial had been unfair (the second time the ECHR had ruled against Spain). The same could easily happen to the Catalans. The fact that the Spanish state still holds more than 240 Basque political prisoners in jail despite ETA ending its armed campaign in 2011 shows its lack of interest in a lasting peace.

The verdict against the Catalan pro-independence leadership for organising a democratic and peaceful referendum, and the subsequent violence the Spanish police used against peaceful Catalan demonstrations, shows us what we always knew: the Spanish state is not interested in democracy and will use violence to conceal its undemocratic nature.

This is why the state plays up, and at times instigates, violence in the region. The Spanish media and courts have even started talking about “terrorism” in the Catalan case. Spain will not hesitate to use this lie. Its government would love to transform Catalans’ legitimate and peaceful demand for self-determination into violence. That is what the police and military forces have been trying to do the last few days with their violent tactics.

Fortunately, the Catalan nationalist movement is committed to peace. As we are in the Basque country. We know that our “force of reason” is stronger than their “reason of force”. At the same time we both are committed to achieving our fundamental democratic rights – Catalan and Basque demands for democracy will now only get louder. It is time to complete the unfinished business of Spain’s phoney transition to democracy – and there will not be real democracy in Spain until its plurinational character is recognised, just as in the UK or Canada.

Rather predictably, Spain is going in the opposite direction: the direction of authoritarianism, counter-reform, the recentralisation of powers and responding to democratic demands with an iron fist. All this gives wings to the fascist extreme right. History shows us where this leads in the end.

Repression, imprisonment and centralisation will not work. Like in most similar cases around the world there is no lasting solution to this kind of conflict without dialogue. Like in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Quebec, the only way to solve these tensions is through democracy. And anyone with a bit of political sense knows that the state needs to engage with legitimate Catalan representatives. A policy of repression with no talks and no negotiation is unacceptable.

All the while, European institutions and states look the other way. Other European governments should be encouraging Spain to change track. Yet at the moment a desire to maintain internal stability within the bloc trumps all, and that means blind loyalty to Spain. This conflict can only be resolved internationally – European institutions and states should raise their voices in favour of a negotiated solution, before it is too late.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/comment...h-state-repression-catalonia-democracy-basque.
 
About 350,000 people have protested in Barcelona over the jailing of separatist leaders from Spain's Catalonia region, police say.

The peaceful march was also organised to underline support for Catalonia's independence movement.

A separate demonstration by a direct action group turned violent on Saturday evening, as protesters targeted the police headquarters.

Spanish unionists plan to hold their own mass rally in the city on Sunday.

Catalan crisis in 300 words
Nine separatist leaders were jailed on 14 October by Spain's Supreme Court for between nine and 13 years after being convicted of sedition.

The days that followed saw some of the worst violence in the history of the modern independence movement, which prides itself on its peaceful tactics.

What happened on Saturday?
Grassroots independence groups had urged independence supporters to fill the streets but said they were committed to peaceful protests, Reuters news agency reports.

A sea of protesters stretched from the city's waterfront to the landmark Sagrada Familia church.

"It is time to sit down and talk," one protester told Reuters. "I think it is time for the state to find a solution because it seems that this has no end and we are always at the same point. We have come here because we are fed up with so much repression that we have suffered from the state."

"We have always defended non-violence," said another. "What is happening in Barcelona is not a reflection of us, we separatists are not violent, we want our country, we want to be free."

The day had begun with a gathering of mayors from across Catalonia to endorse the campaign for self-determination.

Mayors of 814 out of the region's 947 local authorities gathered at the regional government's headquarters to meet Catalan President Quim Torra.

As the mayors chanted "independence", Mr Torra said Catalans must unite to oppose "repression" and "force the Spanish state to talk".

Later on Saturday, a pro-independence group that favours direct action organised a protest outside the police headquarters in the city. Demonstrators threw balls, bottles and stones at riot police.

Riot police later moved to disperse the crowds, armed with shields and batons and backed by riot vans.

Projectiles were fired during the clashes and at least six people were hospitalised with injuries, according to Reuters news agency.

On Sunday, politicians from Spain's two main centre-right parties, the Popular Party and Ciudadanos, are expected to attend the unionist rally, which comes two weeks before the Spanish general election.

Meanwhile, supporters of the far-right Vox party rallied in the Spanish capital Madrid on Saturday to hear calls for a harder line on the separatists.

Party leader Santiago Abascal attacked Spain's mainstream parties, including the ruling Socialists, telling the crowd: "Faced with criminal separatism, there is only Vox!"

How bad were the clashes earlier this month?

Rioters threw paving stones and petrol bombs while police fired baton rounds and used truncheons.

Cars and other property were damaged as fires were lit in the streets of Barcelona and other towns.

Between 14 and 20 October, 593 people, including 226 police officers, received treatment for injuries as a result of the protests, according to regional emergency services.

The Spanish authorities later updated the number of officers injured to 289.

Why is there a crisis in Catalonia?
Successive Spanish governments have refused to grant separatists in Catalonia a referendum on independence, which became a live issue again after the global financial crisis of 2008.

Spurred on by the results of an unrecognised plebiscite in November 2014, separatists held an illegal referendum in October 2017, which Spain tried to prevent by force, eventually jailing the separatist leaders.

While the separatists regularly attract massive shows of public support, they have only a slim majority in the regional parliament and a recent survey suggests Catalonia's residents oppose independence by about 48% to 44%.

Catalonia has its own language and distinctive traditions, and a population nearly as big as Switzerland's (7.5 million). It is one of Spain's wealthiest regions, making up 16% of the national population and accounting for almost 19% of Spanish GDP.

The EU has treated the crisis as an internal matter for Spain, deaf to the separatists' pleas for support, but there have been warnings that the issue is damaging Spain's democratic credentials.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50194846.
 
Microsoft-owned GitHub has blocked Spanish users from accessing an app designed to help Catalan independence protesters.

It follows a takedown request by the Spanish military police.

Authorities described the Tsunami Democràtic group, which is behind the app, as a "criminal organisation" which incites riots.

GitHub said it always complied with lawful requests.

A spokesman said: "Although we may not always agree with those laws, we may need to block content if we receive a valid request from a government official so that our users in that jurisdiction may continue to have access to GitHub to collaborate and build software."

GitHub has received takedown requests from China and Russia, related to different posts.

From hosting to protests
San Francisco-based GitHub provides hosting for software developers and allows coders to collaborate with each other.

It was bought by Microsoft in 2018 for $7.5bn (£5.8bn).

Tsunami Democràtic used GitHub to develop tools to co-ordinate protest action, including an encrypted communication app.

The group helped to organise pro-independence rallies at Barcelona airport, which saw dozens of flights cancelled.

Protestors demonstrating against the imprisonment of nine Catalan separatist leaders have copied tactics devised by demonstrators in Hong Kong, including blocking airports and using encrypted messaging.

This is not the first time a company has removed an app linked to protests.

Earlier this month, Apple removed an app which protesters in Hong Kong used to track police movements, claiming it violated the company's rules.

Tsunami Democràtic told TechCrunch that users of Apple's iPhone can't yet download the app because the "politics of the App Store is very restrictive".

The app is currently only available as a raw Android file, and users cannot download it via the Google Play store either.

'Sabotage'
The Spanish military police, or Guardia Civil, said protestors had engaged in "sabotage" of Spain's main infrastructure.

GitHub's website says it follows a four-step process each time it receives a takedown request.

This includes notifying affected users and giving them the chance to dispute any request.

It also says it tries to "limit the geographic scope of the takedown when possible".

Joe Brew, an independent data scientist, said the ban was likely to be ineffective.

"Trying to ban these types of things is like a game of cat-and-mouse. The moment you succeed with a ban in one place, it pops up in ten other places."

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-50232902.
 
Police hunt ex-Catalan separatist leader after return from exile

Police in Barcelona are hunting for the separatist former leader of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, who made a dramatic return to Spain after a seven-year exile despite facing an outstanding arrest warrant.

For much of the past several years he has lived in Brussels, after police indicted him on charges linked to a failed bid for independence in 2017.

Mr Puigdemont briefly addressed hundreds of supporters who gathered near the Catalan parliament in Barcelona, shortly ahead of the expected investiture of a new head of the Catalan government.

He said he had returned "to remind you that we are still here" and added: "Holding a referendum is not and will never be a crime."

Mr Puigdemont then disappeared.

Many were expecting him to turn up inside the parliament building in time for the investiture ceremony at 10:00 (08:00 GMT), but he was nowhere to be seen.

Spanish media reported that an operation to find and arrest Mr Puigdemont has now been launched by the Mossos d'Esquadra - Catalan police. Quoting police sources, newspaper El Pais said the exits from Barcelona have been closed.

Roadblocks have also been set up across the city, a spokesperson for Catalonia's interior department said in a statement.

There appear to be several motives behind Carles Puigdemont's return to Spain.

Firstly, he wants to pressure the authorities into applying the new amnesty law to him, after the supreme court excluded him from its application on technical grounds.

He also aims to disrupt the investiture of Socialist Salvador Illa as the new Catalan president today.

The former Spanish health minister would become the region's first non-nationalist leader since 2010.

Equally important for Mr Puigdemont is to assert himself and his Junts per Catalunya (JxCat) party as the main pro-independence force.

He is keen to cast his separatist rival, the Catalan Republican Left (ERC), as being complicit with Spanish unionism because of its agreement to support Mr Illa's investiture.

Until a new local government is in place, ERC is still responsible for the Catalan police force, making the former regional president's return particularly uncomfortable for the party.

BBC
 
Police hunt ex-Catalan separatist leader after return from exile

Police in Barcelona are hunting for the separatist former leader of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, who made a dramatic return to Spain after a seven-year exile despite facing an outstanding arrest warrant.

For much of the past several years he has lived in Brussels, after police indicted him on charges linked to a failed bid for independence in 2017.

Mr Puigdemont briefly addressed hundreds of supporters who gathered near the Catalan parliament in Barcelona, shortly ahead of the expected investiture of a new head of the Catalan government.

He said he had returned "to remind you that we are still here" and added: "Holding a referendum is not and will never be a crime."

Mr Puigdemont then disappeared.

Many were expecting him to turn up inside the parliament building in time for the investiture ceremony at 10:00 (08:00 GMT), but he was nowhere to be seen.

Spanish media reported that an operation to find and arrest Mr Puigdemont has now been launched by the Mossos d'Esquadra - Catalan police. Quoting police sources, newspaper El Pais said the exits from Barcelona have been closed.

Roadblocks have also been set up across the city, a spokesperson for Catalonia's interior department said in a statement.

There appear to be several motives behind Carles Puigdemont's return to Spain.

Firstly, he wants to pressure the authorities into applying the new amnesty law to him, after the supreme court excluded him from its application on technical grounds.

He also aims to disrupt the investiture of Socialist Salvador Illa as the new Catalan president today.

The former Spanish health minister would become the region's first non-nationalist leader since 2010.

Equally important for Mr Puigdemont is to assert himself and his Junts per Catalunya (JxCat) party as the main pro-independence force.

He is keen to cast his separatist rival, the Catalan Republican Left (ERC), as being complicit with Spanish unionism because of its agreement to support Mr Illa's investiture.

Until a new local government is in place, ERC is still responsible for the Catalan police force, making the former regional president's return particularly uncomfortable for the party.

BBC


Ex-Catalan leader ‘eludes police manhunt and flees Spain’

Carles Puigdemont, the fugitive ex-Catalan leader, has evaded a massive police manhunt and fled Spain, his party has said.

Spanish authorities launched a large manhunt for Mr Puigdemont on Thursday after he made a shock return to Spain, gave a short speech to crowds in Barcelona and then disappeared.

He's wanted by Spain on charges linked to a failed bid for Catalan independence in 2017.

After a tumultuous 24 hours on the run, Mr Puigdemont is now back in Belgium where he lives, his party's secretary general Jordi Turull said on Friday.

For much of the past several years Mr Puigdemont has lived in Brussels. He's spent nearly seven years in exile.

In an interview with RAC1 radio station, Mr Turull said he knew the ex-Catalan leader was in Brussels but could not confirm whether he had made it back to his home in the Waterloo municipality.

Catalan's police, known as Mossos d'Esquadra, are facing strong scrutiny from a Spanish Supreme Court judge, who has demanded an explanation as to why Mr Puigdemont was able to get away.

Mr Puigdemont's disruptive appearance near the Catalan parliament in Barcelona was moments before the investiture of Socialist Salvador Illa as the new Catalan president.

BBC
 
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