Catalan independence referendum: Region vote overwhelmingly for secession from Spain
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Catalan independence referendum: Region votes overwhelmingly for | The New ... |
Catalonia has overwhelmingly voted in favor of freedom from Spain, with 90 for every penny of more than two million votes tallied saying "yes", the territorial government has said.
As indicated by voting figures issued from the get-go Monday morning, 90.9 for each penny of the votes now included, or 2,020,144 were support of freedom, and 7.87 for every penny, only 176,565, were against.
The provincial government representative, Jordi Turull, said 15,000 votes were still due to be tallied and that aggregate voting figures stay inadequate and temporary in light of the fact that a considerably bigger number, an expected 770,000, are either out of reach or lost after some surveying stations were shut and voting booths were seized by police.
"There have been gigantic troubles, however, the vote has happened and we've gone from 'votarem' [we will vote] to 'trim vote' [voting has happened.]"; Mr. Turull said.
"We will regard the order which the residents have given us," local Vice President Oriol Junqueras said.
Indeed, even before the figures were made open, Catalan head Carles Puigdemont had just indicated unequivocally at a potential one-sided presentation of autonomy when he guaranteed the aftereffects of the submission will be sent to Catalonia's parliament inside the following couple of days.
As the consequences of town after town in Catalonia got through, the master autonomy vote in the choice looked on track for an avalanche triumph.
In Girona, a patriot fortification and the first of Catalonia's four common capitals to announce its vote, the genius freedom vote was 27, 786 votes for severance out of a sum of 29, 717 votes cast, while just 1,086 voted to stay in Spain.
With a limited dissident dominant part in control in the provincial parliament, it is difficult to perceive how Mr. Puigdemont's guarantee to follow up on these outcomes would not expand the likelihood of a one-sided presentation of autonomy (UDI).
A UDI has just been guaranteed by a few patriot legislators should the submission convey a dominant part for withdrawal. Catalonia's submission law likewise predicts a UDI by the territorial parliament of Catalonia if there is a greater part.
"With this day of expectation and enduring, Catalonia has earned the privilege to be a free state," Mr
Puigdemont demanded in a broadcast discourse on Sunday night.
Be that as it may, the Spanish government has said more than once it doesn't perceive the submission, not to mention its outcomes. Outside Catalonia in whatever is left of Spain, a few sections of the media and government officials contend that the submission encroached essential constituent controls, while the nation's sacred court effectively pronounced it illicit.
On Sunday Socialist Party pioneer Pedro Sanchez' reverberated Spanish Premier Mariano's Rajoy's dismissal of the submission, and Mr. Rajoy expressed completely that "there was no choice, only an affection of one."
Yet, the Catalan patriots were having none of that on Sunday night, with Mr. Puigdemont contending that "a great many individuals have talked uproarious and clear, and we have the privilege to choose our future."
Late into the night gigantic group shaped in the Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona, spreading into sidestreets to tune into Mr. Puigdemont's discourse on a goliath TV screen. In focal squares crosswise over littler urban areas in Catalonia, some master choice supporters took after the outcomes and addresses, cheering as the votes for severance came through, while autos embellished with Catalan banners weaved through the avenues sounding their horns.
In the interim Catalan government, figures say the aggregate number of individuals requiring healing center treatment following vicious conflicts with police has now ascended to 844.
Two individuals are genuinely harmed, one a 70-year-old man who endured a heart assault, and the other a youngster who was hit in the eye by an elastic shot.
As indicated by voting figures issued from the get-go Monday morning, 90.9 for each penny of the votes now included, or 2,020,144 were support of freedom, and 7.87 for every penny, only 176,565, were against.
The provincial government representative, Jordi Turull, said 15,000 votes were still due to be tallied and that aggregate voting figures stay inadequate and temporary in light of the fact that a considerably bigger number, an expected 770,000, are either out of reach or lost after some surveying stations were shut and voting booths were seized by police.
"There have been gigantic troubles, however, the vote has happened and we've gone from 'votarem' [we will vote] to 'trim vote' [voting has happened.]"; Mr. Turull said.
"We will regard the order which the residents have given us," local Vice President Oriol Junqueras said.
Indeed, even before the figures were made open, Catalan head Carles Puigdemont had just indicated unequivocally at a potential one-sided presentation of autonomy when he guaranteed the aftereffects of the submission will be sent to Catalonia's parliament inside the following couple of days.
As the consequences of town after town in Catalonia got through, the master autonomy vote in the choice looked on track for an avalanche triumph.
In Girona, a patriot fortification and the first of Catalonia's four common capitals to announce its vote, the genius freedom vote was 27, 786 votes for severance out of a sum of 29, 717 votes cast, while just 1,086 voted to stay in Spain.
With a limited dissident dominant part in control in the provincial parliament, it is difficult to perceive how Mr. Puigdemont's guarantee to follow up on these outcomes would not expand the likelihood of a one-sided presentation of autonomy (UDI).
A UDI has just been guaranteed by a few patriot legislators should the submission convey a dominant part for withdrawal. Catalonia's submission law likewise predicts a UDI by the territorial parliament of Catalonia if there is a greater part.
"With this day of expectation and enduring, Catalonia has earned the privilege to be a free state," Mr
Puigdemont demanded in a broadcast discourse on Sunday night.
Be that as it may, the Spanish government has said more than once it doesn't perceive the submission, not to mention its outcomes. Outside Catalonia in whatever is left of Spain, a few sections of the media and government officials contend that the submission encroached essential constituent controls, while the nation's sacred court effectively pronounced it illicit.
On Sunday Socialist Party pioneer Pedro Sanchez' reverberated Spanish Premier Mariano's Rajoy's dismissal of the submission, and Mr. Rajoy expressed completely that "there was no choice, only an affection of one."
Late into the night gigantic group shaped in the Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona, spreading into sidestreets to tune into Mr. Puigdemont's discourse on a goliath TV screen. In focal squares crosswise over littler urban areas in Catalonia, some master choice supporters took after the outcomes and addresses, cheering as the votes for severance came through, while autos embellished with Catalan banners weaved through the avenues sounding their horns.
In the interim Catalan government, figures say the aggregate number of individuals requiring healing center treatment following vicious conflicts with police has now ascended to 844.
Two individuals are genuinely harmed, one a 70-year-old man who endured a heart assault, and the other a youngster who was hit in the eye by an elastic shot.
Catalonia independence referendum: Riot police clash with voters
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Catalan independence referendum: Region votes overwhelmingly for | The New ... |
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