Spanish opposition protests Catalan amnesty law

Crowd carried numerous Spanish, European flags, as well as banners saying No to amnesty and Sanchez traitor

By AFP
|
January 29, 2024
Protestors hold a sign depicting Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont in jail during a demonstration called by the opposition party Partido Popular against the government's amnesty law for people involved in Catalonia's failed 2017 independence bid on January 28, 2024. — AFP

MADRID: Spanish opposition parties demonstrated in Madrid on Sunday in a last gasp effort to stop an amnesty for Catalan separatists over their role in a 2007 secession bid.

About 45,000 people heeded the call by the Popular Party to gather in the capital´s central Plaza de Espana, according to police estimates.

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The amnesty bill, which was imposed by Catalan parties as a condition for agreeing to support Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez´s coalition, will be presented on Tuesday to the lower house of Spain´s parliament.

Once approved and enacted, which could take several months, the law would block legal action against hundreds of Catalan activists who are being investigated or have been charged for their role in the attempted declaration of an independent Catalan state in 2007.

Sunday´s march was attended by PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo and former prime minister Mariano Rajoy, as well as president of the Madrid region Isabel Diaz Ayuso.

The crowd carried numerous Spanish and European flags, as well as banners saying “No to amnesty” and “Sanchez traitor”.

Silvia Sobral, 64, said she´d come to protest against “this traitor government” that wants to “destroy the Spanish nation”.

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