MADRID: Thousands of people, many waving red and yellow Spanish flags, rallied in Madrid in favor of Spanish unity on Saturday, a day before a banned referendum on independence for Catalonia.
The demonstrators gathered in the central Plaza de Cibeles, in front of the capital’s town hall, chanting “Catalonia is part of Spain!” and “I am Spanish, Spanish, Spanish!” — a cry usually heard during national team football matches.
Some of the demonstrators called for Catalonia’s pro-independence president, Carles Puigdemont, to be jailed.
Puigdemont has vowed to push ahead with the independence vote for Catalonia, a wealthy northeastern region that is home to about 7.5 million people, even though a Spanish court has ruled that the vote is unconstitutional.
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative government has also said the referendum is illegal and has vowed to do everything in its power to stop it.
“The state needs to explain the benefits of remaining united, instead of repeating all the time that the referendum is illegal. But there is no leader in Spain,” said Rafael Castillo, a 59-year-old engineer at the rally, wearing a scarf with the Spanish flag around his neck.
Beside him stood Fernando Cepeda, a 58-year-old engineer, who said Catalonia and Spain’s northern Basque Country already enjoyed more powers than German regions.
“We should not have come to this. We have reached a point of no return,” said Cepeda, a Spanish flag tied around the waist.
Maite Lopez Sanchez, 55, who came to the protest with her daughter, said Spanish institutions should “explain better what they are doing to enforce the constitution.”
“We don’t know what can happen tomorrow, anything can happen,” she said.
Pro-unity protests were held in several other Spanish cities including Seville, Santander, Palma de Mallorca and Barcelona.
The referendum has sown deep divisions among Catalans themselves, while provoking one of the biggest crises to hit Spain since democracy was restored after the death of Franco in 1975.
Thousands rally in Madrid for Spanish unity ahead of Catalonia vote
Thousands rally in Madrid for Spanish unity ahead of Catalonia vote
Russia will examine Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ invite: Putin
- Invites were sent to dozens of world leaders with a request for $1 billion for a permanent seat on the board
MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday said Russia would study US President Donald Trump’s invitation to join his “Board of Peace.”
“The Russian foreign ministry has been charged with studying the documents that were sent to us and to consult on the topic with our strategic partners,” Putin said during a televised government meeting. “It is only after that we’ll be able to reply to the invitation.”
He said that Russia could pay the billion dollars being asked for permanent membership “from the Russian assets frozen under the previous American administration.”
He added that the assets could also be used “to reconstruct the territories damaged by the hostilities, after the conclusion of a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine.”
Invites were sent to dozens of world leaders with a request for $1 billion for a permanent seat on the board.
Although originally meant to oversee Gaza’s rebuilding, the board’s charter does not seem to limit its role to the Palestinian coastal enclave and appears to want to rival the United Nations, drawing the ire of some US allies including France.









