Catalonia referendum: Spanish court suspends Catalan parliament in wake of independence vote
Catalan
President earlier said his government planned to declare independence
‘in a matter of days'
5
October, 2017
The
Spanish government has suspended the Catalan parliamentary session
planned for Monday in which a declaration of independence from Spain
was expected to be made.
The
country’s constitutional court said such a declaration would be “a
breach of the constitution”.
Tensions
between the central government and the region have mounted following
last weekend’s referendum on secession, which saw violent clashes
between Catalan citizens and the national police.
The
Spanish government has suspended the Catalan parliamentary session
planned for Monday in which a declaration of independence from Spain
was expected to be made.
The
country’s constitutional court said such a declaration would be “a
breach of the constitution”.
Tensions
between the central government and the region have mounted following
last weekend’s referendum on secession, which saw violent clashes
between Catalan citizens and the national police.
Catalan President Carles Puigdemont had earlier said his government planned to declare independence in the wake of the referendum, “in a matter of days”.
But
the opposition socialist party in the regional parliament, which
opposes secession, had called for Monday’s session to be blocked –
a challenge which was upheld by Spain’s constitutional court.
Separatist
parties only have a slim majority of the seats in the Catalan
parliament.
Last
Sunday’s referendum recorded a turnout of 2.2 million people – 42
per cent of the electorate – many of whom faced riot police at
polling stations. In addition, police removed some ballot boxes in an
attempt to enforce a Spanish court order to prevent the vote.
The
organisers said 90 per cent voted for independence, but have not
published the final results.
Lawyers
representing the regional parliament had also warned that the session
would technically be illegal because it planned to discuss the
results of a referendum that had been previously suspended by the
constitutional court.
Before
the vote, Madrid said the referendum was illegal, and as the results
were announced Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said there had “been no
referendum”.
He
subsequently said the regional Catalan government must abandon plans
to declare independence, to avoid “greater evils”.
Mr
Rajoy said the solution for the region “is the prompt return to
legality and the affirmation, as early as possible, that there will
be no unilateral declaration of independence, because that way
greater evils will be avoided,” he told Spain's EFE news agency.
Spain’s
King Felipe VI also condemned the actions of the Catalan
administration, saying the situation in Spain had become “very
serious” and that those who had organised the vote were “outside
the law”.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.