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Groton Daily Independent
Sunday, Oct, 1, 2017 ~ Vol. 25 - No. 084 ~ 25 of 43
Spanish police re rubber bullets near Catalan voting site By ARITZ PARRA and JOSEPH WILSON, Associated Press
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Spanish riot police smashed their way into polling stations to try to halt a disputed independence referendum on Sunday and red rubber bullets at protesters outside a Barcelona polling station. Several people were injured.
The of cers red the rubber bullets while trying to clear protesters who were trying to prevent National Police cars from leaving after police con scated ballot boxes from the voting center. The Spanish govern- ment has ordered police to stop the voting process, saying it’s illegal.
Catalan of cials said 38 people were treated for mostly minor injuries. An AP photographer saw several people who had been injured during the scuf es outside Barcelona’s Rius i Taule school, where some voters had cast ballots before police arrived
Catalan President Carles Puigdemont condemned the crackdown.
“Police brutality will shame forever the Spanish state,” he said as crowds cheered.
Enric Millo, the Spanish government’s representative in the region, said police and National Guard forces
acted “professionally” to enforce court orders. He said any attempt to claim the referendum as valid is doomed.
“Today’s events in Catalonia can never be portrayed as a referendum or anything similar,” he said.
Manuel Conedeminas, a 48-year-old IT manager who tried to block police from driving away with the ballot boxes, said agents had kicked them before using their batons and ring the projectiles, which were ball-shaped.
Elsewhere, Civil Guard of cers, wearing helmets and carrying shields, used a hammer to break the glass of the front door and a lock cutter to break into the Sant Julia de Ramis sports center near the city of Girona. At least one woman was injured outside the building and wheeled away on a stretcher by paramedics.
Clashes broke out less than an hour after polls opened, and not long before Catalonia regional president Carles Puigdemont was expected to turn up to vote at the sports center. Polling station workers inside the building reacted peacefully and broke out into songs and chants challenging the of cers’ presence.
Puigdemont was forced to vote in Cornella de Terri, near the northern city of Girona, his spokesman Joan Maria Pique told The Associated Press.
The Spanish government and its security forces are trying to prevent voting in the independence refer- endum, which is backed by Catalan regional authorities. Spanish of cials had said force wouldn’t be used, but that voting wouldn’t be allowed.
Spain’s Constitutional Court has suspended the vote. Regional separatist leaders pledged to hold it anyway, promising to declare independence if the “yes” side wins, and have called on 5.3 million eligible voters to cast ballots.
Police had sealed off many voting centers in the hours before the vote to prevent their use. Others were lled with activists determined to hold their ground.
Spanish riot police forcefully removed a few hundred would-be voters from a polling station at a school in Barcelona.
Daniel Riano was inside when the police pushed aside a large group gathered outside busted in the Estela school’s front door.
The 54-year-old Riano said that “we were waiting inside to vote when the National Police used force to enter, they used a mace to break in the glass door and they took everything.”
He said that “one policeman put me in a headlock to drag me out, while I was holding my wife’s hand. It was incredible. They didn’t give any warning.”
National Police and Civil Guard of cers also showed up in other polling centers where Catalan of cials were expected.
Catalans braved rain and de ed police orders to abandon designated voting stations.
Joaquim Bosch, a 73-year-old retiree at Princep de Viana high school, where a crowd of 20 people was growing Sunday morning, said he was uneasy about a possible police response to the crowds.