Spain set to impose direct rule in
Catalonia as crisis spirals
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[October 27, 2017]
By Julien Toyer and Sam Edwards
MADRID/BARCELONA (Reuters) - The Spanish
government prepared to impose direct rule over Catalonia on Friday to
block its push for independence, an unprecedented move that takes
Spain's worst political crisis in four decades to a new level.
The upper house of Spain's parliament, the Senate, was meeting to
approve Article 155, the law that will allow the central government to
take over the autonomous region.
In Catalonia's main city Barcelona, separatist leaders were figuring out
their next move, which could include a unilateral declaration of
independence, as supporters gathered in the streets.
"Exceptional measures should only be adopted when no other remedy is
possible," Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in an address to
the Senate. "In my opinion there is no alternative. The only thing that
can be done and should be done is to accept and comply with the law."
The Catalan leadership was ignoring the law and making a mockery of
democracy, he said.
"We are facing a challenge unprecedented in our recent history," said
Rajoy, who has staked out an uncompromising position against Catalonia's
campaign to break away from Spain.
The crisis has split Catalonia and caused deep resentment around Spain -
national flags now hang from many balconies in the capital in an
expression of unity.
It has also prompted a flight of business from the wealthy northeastern
region and alarmed European leaders who fear the crisis could fan
separatist sentiment around the continent.
A vote in the Senate was expected by 2 p.m. (1200 GMT). Rajoy was then
expected to convene his cabinet to adopt the first measures to govern
Catalonia directly. This could include sacking the Barcelona government
and assuming direct supervision of Catalan police forces.
But how direct rule would work on the ground - including the reaction of
civil servants and the police - is uncertain.
Some independence supporters have promised to mount a campaign of civil
disobedience, which could lead to direct confrontation with security
forces.
What could happen in the regional parliament of Catalonia was also
unclear.
Catalan president Carles Puigdemont on Thursday ruled out a new regional
election that might break the deadlock and said it was now up to the
parliament to act on a mandate to break from Spain following an
independence referendum on Oct. 1.
The ballot, which drew only a 43 percent turnout as Catalans who oppose
independence largely boycotted it, was declared illegal by Madrid and
national police used heavy-handed tactics to try to stop it.
Puigdemont made an ambiguous declaration of independence on Oct. 10,
which he immediately suspended to allow for talks with the government.
But no discussions were held and Puigdemont later spurned an invitation
to appear before the Senate to explain his position.
The Barcelona-based newspaper La Vanguardia said secessionists on Friday
registered a motion with the regional parliament to proclaim
independence from Spain and a Catalan republic.
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Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy reacts during a debate at the
upper house Senate in Madrid, Spain, October 27, 2017.
REUTERS/Susana Vera
The motion was presented by lawmakers from Junts pel Si (Together
for Yes) and CUP (Popular Unity Candidacy), which
together hold a majority in the assembly.
If the motion was taken to a vote, lawmakers backing it could be
sued for disobedience and jailed for up to 30 years if found guilty.
Two senior secessionist leaders have already been jailed on court
order for sedition.
In any case, Spain's constitutional court would immediately block
any claim for statehood and other European countries have made clear
they would not recognize Catalonia as an independent state. Germany
said on Friday it supported the Spanish government in the dispute
but hoped both sides would defuse the situation through dialogue.
WORRIED, NERVOUS
Barcelona, crowds of independence supporters were swelling on
downtown streets, shouting "Liberty" in the Catalan language and
singing traditional Catalan songs.
"I'm worried, I'm nervous like everybody. But freedom is never
free," said Jaume Moline, 50, musician.
Montserrat Rectoret, a 61-year-old historian, said: "I am emotional
because Catalonia has struggled for 40 years to be independent and
finally I can see it."
Catalonia is one of Spain's most prosperous regions and already has
a high degree of autonomy. But it has a litany of historic
grievances, exacerbated during the 1939-1975 Franco dictatorship,
when its culture and politics were suppressed.
In another indication of the economic and financial fall-out from
the crisis, France's Suez SEVI.PA, the main water provider in Spain,
said it had temporarily moved the legal registration of its offices
from Barcelona to Madrid.
"What we see now in Catalonia is uncertainty," Chief Financial
Officer Christophe Cros said.
Spanish bank BBVA said national economic growth in what is the euro
zone's fourth-largest economy could be below 2.5 percent in 2018 if
the Catalan situation persisted.
The yield on Spanish benchmark debt fell in early trade on Friday
morning but has since begun rising amid concerns of an independence
vote in Catalonia. The leading stock exchange, the IBEX, deepened
losses through the morning.
(Reporting by Paul Day and Julien Toyer, writing by Angus MacSwan,
editing by Mark Heinrich)
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