Catalan leader appeals for mediation
SPAIN: The secessionist leader of Catalonia called for international mediation yesterday in the region’s dispute with Madrid, a day after hundreds of people were hurt as police swung truncheons and fired rubber bullets to disrupt an independence referendum.
Results showed voters had overwhelmingly backed independence in the referendum, which Spain has ruled illegal and which opponents of secession mostly boycotted.
The vote was valid and must be implemented, said Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont.
‘‘It is not a domestic matter,’’ he told a news conference. He said it was ‘‘obvious that we need mediation’’, adding: ‘‘We don’t want a traumatic break ... We want a new understanding with the Spanish state.’’
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy met leaders of other political parties yesterday, and his conservative government issued a statement saying he was seeking a joint response to the crisis. He also spoke with other European leaders.
In Barcelona, hundreds of students gathered in a central square to protest Monday’s police crackdown, chanting proindependence slogans and waving Catalan flags. Another protest was held later outside the headquarters of the Spanish National Police in Barcelona.
Elsewhere, life in the city returned to near normal, but the violence had clearly left people in shock and may have hardened attitudes among those who favour independence.
With 95 per cent of the vote counted, authorities said the ‘‘Yes’’ vote stood at 90.1 per cent, on a turnout of 2.26 million out of 5.34 million registered voters.
The Spanish government has taken the risk that its violent crackdown could increase support for the secessionists.
Puigdemont, who held the vote in defiance of a court order, urged Rajoy to say whether he was in favour of mediation, which he said should be overseen by the European Union. He said Brussels had been timid and lacked courage on the matter. –