Hundreds of thousands of people marched in Barcelona on
Sunday to protest Catalonia’s secession from Spain, in the largest show of
strength to date by unionists, who usually describe themselves as the “silent
majority.”
According to the
Catalan Civil Society (SCC), which organised the “Enough! Let’s go back to
reason” march, more than one million people took part. Barcelona’s local
police, the Guardia Urbana, gave a 350,000 estimate. “We are peaceful citizens who believe in
coexistence and freedom. “We will show these minoritarian secessionists that
Spain is a modern country,” Nobel Literature Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa
said in a speech at the end of the rally. The 81-year-old writer and journalist
said it would “take more than a coup plot to destroy what has been built in 500
years of history.”
The Nobel Laurette
was born in Peru but a nationalized Spaniard who lived in Barcelona in the
1970s, From the morning, people draped with Spanish and anti-independence
Catalan flags – which lack the white star that is present on the secessionist
Catalan flag – could be heard singing The songs include “We are all Catalans,”
“Only one nation” and “Puigdemont in prison.” Carles Puigdemont is Catalonia’s
regional premier, and head of a secessionist coalition which organised an Oct.1
independence referendum that was banned by the Constitutional Court but went
ahead, despite violent Spanish police attempts to stop it.
Before the march, hundreds gathered outside the local
headquarters of the Guardia Civil, Spain’s military police, expressing support
for its actions.
On social media,
people could be seen booing Catalan police, whose chief is suspected of
collusion with separatists. Protesters,
some of whom arrived via bus or train from other parts of Spain, marched
peacefully. They were backed by the ruling People’s Party (PP), the
pro-government Catalan Ciudadanos party, and, at the last minute, by the
opposition Socialist Party. Turnout figures were impressive, but were still
lower than what was achieved by the pro-independence camp in an Oct. 3 general
strike, when 700,000 people took to Barcelona’s streets, according to Guardia
Urbana estimates.
Despite some
secessionists’ attempts to label Sunday’s march as a right-wing, authoritarian
event, several people insisted that the pro-independence camp did not have a
monopoly on progressive opinion. “I’m a leftist but I do not want independence.
I want Spain to become a federal state,” Angel, a 50-year-old teacher and
supporter of the leftist Podemos party, told dpa. Secession is deeply divisive:
In the disputed referendum, 90 per cent of Catalans voted to break off from
Spain, but the ballot was boycotted by most pro-union Catalans, and turnout was
only 43 per cent.
On Sunday, a poll
published by the conservative La Razon daily said 79.4 per cent of Spaniards,
and 58.9 per cent of Catalans, were against the unilateral declaration of
independence Catalan authorities are said to be considering. Puigdemont is scheduled to address the
Catalan parliament on Tuesday’ However, he is under pressure to hold off from
secession plans, which would escalate what is already the biggest political
crisis Spain has experienced since a 1981 failed military coup. Several
businesses, including major banks, have started moving their legal headquarters
out of Catalonia, casting doubt on whether one of Spain’s wealthiest regions
would risk a major capital flight if it broke off from Madrid. (dpa/NAN)
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