Spain to remove Catalonia's leader, in escalating secession crisis

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Spain to remove Catalonia's leader, in escalating secession crisis

By Raphae Minder
Updated

Barcelona: The escalating confrontation over Catalonia's independence drive took its most serious turn Saturday as Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy of Spain announced he would remove the leadership of the restive region and initiate a process of direct rule by the central government in Madrid.

It was the first time that Spain's government had moved to strip the autonomy of one of its 17 regions, and the first time that a leader had invoked Article 155 of the Spanish Constitution — a broad tool intended to protect the "general interests" of the nation.

The unexpectedly forceful moves by Mr Rajoy, made after an emergency Cabinet meeting, thrust Spain into uncharted waters. The prime minister is trying to put down one of the gravest constitutional crises his country has faced since embracing democracy after the death of its dictator General Francisco Franco in 1975.

The steps were immediately condemned by Catalan leaders and risked further inflaming an already volatile atmosphere in the prosperous northeastern region. On October 1, thousands braved national police wielding truncheons to vote in a contentious independence referendum for Catalonia, even after it was declared illegal by the Spanish government and courts.

Carles Puigdemont, Catalonia's president, participates in a demonstration against the Spanish government.

Carles Puigdemont, Catalonia's president, participates in a demonstration against the Spanish government.Credit: Bloomberg

"There's nothing soft or limited about what he announced today," Josep Ramoneda, a political columnist, said of Mr Rajoy. "We're entering a very delicate phase, in which an independence movement that appeared to be running out of options might now draw instead on a collective sense of humiliation at seeing Catalonia being forced under Madrid's control."

Fuelled by economic grievances and a distinct language and culture, aspirations for an independent state in Catalonia have ebbed and flowed for generations.

But the current confrontation has presented a vexing quandary not only for Spain but also for the entire European Union, pitting demands for self-determination against the desire to preserve the sovereignty and territorial integrity of an important member state.

Rajoy took the bold steps with broad support from Spain's main political opposition, and will almost certainly receive the required approval next week from the Spanish Senate, where his own conservative party holds a majority.

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Protesters wave Catalan flags, also known as the Senyera, and hold signs during a demonstration against the Spanish government.

Protesters wave Catalan flags, also known as the Senyera, and hold signs during a demonstration against the Spanish government.Credit: Bloomberg

He did so despite repeated appeals for dialogue and mediation by Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont, whose independence drive has been shunned by wary EU officials.

Rajoy said the Catalan government had never offered real dialogue but had instead tried to impose its secessionist project on Catalan citizens and the rest of the country in violation of Spain's Constitution.

A girl listens on her phone to Catalan President Carles Puigdemont's speech outside the Palau Generalitat in Barcelona.

A girl listens on her phone to Catalan President Carles Puigdemont's speech outside the Palau Generalitat in Barcelona.Credit: AP

He said his government was putting an end to "a unilateral process, contrary to the law and searching for confrontation" because "no government of any democratic country can accept that the law be violated, ignored and changed."

Mr Rajoy said he planned to remove Mr Puigdemont and the rest of his separatist administration from office. The central government was also poised to take charge of Catalonia's autonomous police force and the Catalan centre for telecommunications.

People listen on their phones to Catalan President Carles Puigdemont's speech outside the Palau Generalitat in Barcelona on Saturday.

People listen on their phones to Catalan President Carles Puigdemont's speech outside the Palau Generalitat in Barcelona on Saturday.Credit: Santi Palacios

Mr Rajoy did not ask to dissolve the Catalan parliament, but instead said that the president of the assembly would not be allowed to take any initiative judged to be contrary to Spain's Constitution for a period of 30 days, including trying to propose another leader to replace Mr Puigdemont.

Mr Rajoy said that his goal was to arrange new Catalan elections within six months, so as to lift the measures taken under Article 155 as soon as possible. It's unclear, however, how such elections would be organised or whether they would significantly change Catalonia's political landscape, let alone help to resolve the territorial conflict.

Mariano Rajoy, Spain's prime minister.

Mariano Rajoy, Spain's prime minister.Credit: Angel Navarrete

Mr Puigdemont led a mass demonstration of 450,000 people in Barcelona, the region's capital, on Saturday afternoon.

In a televised address late Saturday, Puigdemont said he would convene parliament next week to discuss the response to Rajoy; he did not rule out using the session to declare independence. He accused the Spanish government of trying to "eliminate our self-government and our democracy."

In a part of his speech delivered in English, Puigdemont also addressed Europe's politicians and citizens and suggested Europe's "foundational values are at risk" in the dispute with Madrid. "Democratically deciding the future of a nation is not a crime," he argued.

Other Catalan separatist politicians warned that Mr Rajoy's announcement would escalate rather than resolve the conflict.

Josep Lluis Cleries, a Catalan senator, told reporters Saturday that Mr Rajoy was suspending not autonomy in Catalonia but democracy.

Carme Forcadell, separatist president of the Catalan parliament, pledged Saturday evening to defend "the sovereignty" of her assembly. "We will not take a step back," she told a news conference. "Mr Rajoy isn't conscious that by attacking the institutions, he is attacking the society of this country."

Oriol Junqueras, the region's deputy leader, said in a tweet that Catalonia was "facing totalitarianism" and called on citizens to join the Barcelona protest Saturday.

Significantly, Inigo Urkullu, leader of the Basque region, which also has a long history of separatism, described the measures as "disproportionate and extreme," writing on Twitter that they would "dynamite the bridges" to any dialogue.

Faced with Madrid's decision to remove him from office, Mr Puigdemont could try to pre-empt Mr Rajoy's intervention and instead ask Catalan lawmakers to vote on a declaration of independence in coming days.

Mr Puigdemont could also then try to convene Catalan elections, on his own terms, to form what he could describe as the first parliament of a new Catalan republic.

His government has been flouting Spain's Constitution since early September, when separatist lawmakers in the Catalan parliament voted to hold a binding referendum on independence, as a key step toward statehood. An alliance of separatist parties has controlled the parliament since 2015, after winning regional elections, but with only 48 percent of the vote.

Should Mr Puigdemont resist Mr Rajoy's plans, Spain's judiciary could separately step in and order that he and other separatists be arrested on charges of sedition or even rebellion for declaring independence.

Rebellion carries a maximum prison sentence of 30 years. Earlier this week, a judge from Spain's national court ordered prison without bail for two separatist leaders, pending a sedition trial.

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Using Article 155 "was neither our desire nor our intention," Mr Rajoy said Saturday, but had become the only way to return Catalonia to legality, normality and maintain a Spanish economic recovery "which is now under clear danger because of the capricious and unilateral decisions" of the Catalan separatist government.

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