Confusion as Catalan president cancels address

Students protest during a demonstration in front of the Generalitat Palace (Catalan government hqs.) in Barcelona on Thursday. (AFP)

BARCELONA: The president of Spain’s Catalonia region arranged and then hastily canceled an official address Thursday amid speculation that he might back off a full independence bid by calling a snap election.
Later Thursday, Catalonia’s Parliament is expected to debate how to respond to plans by Spanish authorities to take direct control of the prosperous northeastern region, home to 7.5 million people.
The Catalan issue has led to Spain’s deepest political crisis in the four decades since the country restored democratic rule after Gen. Francisco Franco’s dictatorship.
Catalonia has been in a standoff with Spain since a disputed Oct. 1 referendum on independence. Those who voted were overwhelmingly in favor, but less than half of eligible voters went to the polls.
Still, Catalan President Carles Puigdemont has said the referendum, which was outlawed by Spain’s constitutional court, gave him the mandate to declare independence.
But so far he has stopped short of proclaiming a new republic, saying he wants to give the Spanish government a chance to negotiate.
Madrid, for its part, insists it cannot negotiate secession, and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is seeking to activate constitutional powers that will allow the government to take over control of much of the autonomous region’s affairs. The Spanish Senate is scheduled to approve the plan to trigger Article 155 of the Constitution on Friday.
Two parliamentary officials told The Associated Press that Puigdemont had offered through mediators to call the snap election if the central government dropped the takeover bid, but Rajoy’s ruling Popular Party refused.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as the discussions were not being made public.
Popular Party Sen. Javier Arenas said a call for new regional elections would not be enough to stop the Senate. The Spanish government said it would not comment until after Puigdemont makes his stance clear.
The leading opposition Socialist party, meanwhile, says the government must stop the intervention process if Catalonia calls elections within a constitutional framework.
Puigdemont risks being charged with rebellion, something that could land him in jail.
A sudden announcement Thursday morning by Puigdemont’s office that the president would address the media fueled speculation he might be about to back off an expected full declaration of independence.
Quoting unnamed government sources, Catalonia’s main newspaper La Vanguardia reported he was planning to dissolve the regional Parliament and call a fresh election for Dec. 20.
It is not clear, however, that an election would solve any of Spain’s problems with Catalonia as polls consistently show pro-independence parties would likely again win most seats.
Regional vice president Oriol Junqueras, who represents a harder pro-independence line in the ruling coalition, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the Spanish government had left Catalonia “no other option” but to push ahead with the secession bid.
Puigdemont’s Cabinet, including Junqueras, held frantic meetings overnight and on Thursday morning. They were joined by the regional Parliament’s speaker and representatives of Assemblea Nacional Catalana and Omnium Cultural, the grassroots organizations that have been key in the independence push.
The political confusion came as thousands of university and high school students took to the streets to protest Madrid’s takeover plans.
The protesters, many draped in the red and yellow Catalan flag and holding banners calling for independence, marched through central Barcelona, blocking several nearby streets as they headed to the government palace where Puigdemont was expected to speak.
The atmosphere was festive as they marched past the Barcelona headquarters of Spain’s national police shouting “out with the occupation forces,” a slogan that has become ubiquitous in protests since police trying to halt the independence referendum clashed violently with voters.
Some protesters sang “Els Segadors,” the Catalan official anthem. One student leader shouted into a microphone: “Carles, don’t take a step backwards ... don’t be a coward!“
Another protester, 17-year-old high-school student Albert Salgueda, said he would be disappointed if Puigdemont called elections.
“We think the only solution is a declaration of independence. We have come too far to go back now,” he said. If elections were called, “we will go on strike and stop the country. This is the point of no return.”
But not all the demonstrators were in favor of independence.
Seventeen-year-old Martina Gallego said that while she didn’t want Catalonia to secede from Spain, she objected strongly to how the Spanish government is treating the region.
“They are taking all our rights of autonomy away,” she said. “I’m not in favor of independence, but I don’t think this is right.”