Catalonia urges mediation with Spain in secession dispute
BARCELONA, Spain — Catalonia’s leader called Monday for international mediation and for the European Union “to stop looking the other way” in the region’s bid to secede from Spain, a day after a violent crackdown by Spanish police trying to block an independence referendum left hundreds bruised.
Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont also said a special commission would investigate why Spanish police fired rubber bullets, smashed into polling stations and beat protesters with batons Sunday. He urged Spain’s national police reinforcements to leave the northeastern region.
The violence Sunday left more than 890 civilians injured in the melee, two seriously. The Interior Ministry said 39 police received immediate medical treatment and 392 others had scrapes and bruises. Shocking videos showed police dragging people by the hair, kicking them and hitting them with batons.
Puigdemont called for the EU to consider Catalonia’s desire to break away from Spain as a Europe-wide issue and urged Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s government to accept mediation.