Barcelona: Protesters hold a Catalan flag as they gather outside police headquarters during a one-day strike on Tuesday.—AP
Barcelona: Protesters hold a Catalan flag as they gather outside police headquarters during a one-day strike on Tuesday.—AP

BARCELONA: Shouting “occupation forces out” and “the streets will always be ours,” hundreds of thousands turned out in Barcelona on Tuesday to protest police violence during a banned weekend independence referendum in Catalonia.

Columns of people converged onto the city centre as the region went on general strike. A police helicopter flying overhead drew angry whistles as Catalans reel from the unrest that marred parts of the Spain’s northeast region on Sunday.

“On October 1, we were an occupied country, and they haven’t left yet,” Antonia Maria Maura, a 56-year-old primary school teacher, said of national police and Guardia Civil forces that were deployed to Catalonia from other parts of Spain to stop the vote.

City police said 300,000 people were marching in the streets of Barcelona in a peaceful atmosphere, though there were tense moments as protesters said they feared agitators would try and sow discord.

Madrid had repeatedly warned Catalan separatist leaders that it could not go ahead with the referendum in a region deeply divided over independence, but they did so anyway.

As people queued at polling stations, riot police moved in to prevent them from voting, in some cases hitting people with batons and shooting rubber bullets, injuring over 90 people according to regional authorities.

The Catalan government said 90 per cent of the more than 2.2 million people who managed to cast their ballot voted for independence — but over half of eligible voters did not turn out in this region roughly the size of Belgium.

“Closed for revolution,” read a sign at the demonstration, while parents and children from a school used as a polling station on Sunday unrolled a giant banner that students had made.

“Navas-Sagrera for peace and democracy,” read the banner with dozens of multi-coloured little handprints.

Nearby, a group of friends wore black t-shirts with the sign “very fragile” pinned onto the back, in a dig at police.

“You can’t stop the youth,” said Alfredo Vidal, the 68-year-old owner of a dry-cleaning shop, pointing to the hundreds of students walking slowly by, many draped in blue, yellow and red separatist flags.

“When you provoke people, when you offend them, then they react against you,” said Vidal.

“I had never seen Catalans putting their hand on their heart during the Catalan hymn,” he went on. “But for about a month now, I’ve seen them do it, especially the young,” he said as an example of increasingly fervent feelings among supporters of Catalan independence since Madrid started cracking down on the planned vote.

Bewildered tourists in Spain’s second largest city pulled their trolley suitcases through the protesting crowds.

Over on the upmarket Paseo de Gracia boulevard, visitors milled in front of architect Antoni Gaudi’s quirky Casa Batllo, closed as its employees also took part in the general strike.

“It’s a bummer because we’re only here for a few days. But it’s hard to say my vacation is more important than what is happening here,” said Karen Healey, 53, from Portland in the United States.

Published in Dawn, October 4th, 2017

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