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Frank Almonte

Catalonia referendum: Tractors roll into Barcelona to defend vote

Image copyright AFP Image caption The lone-star flag could be seen everywhere on the columns

Columns of tractors waving the lone-star flag of Catalan independence are converging on the region’s towns to defend Sunday’s banned referendum.

Supporters cheered as a column of vehicles, dubbed a Tractorada, rolled into the capital, Barcelona, streaming past the famous Sagrada Familia church.

Catalan leaders have finally revealed the ballot boxes they plan to use.

The Spanish government has again pledged to stop the referendum, which it says is unconstitutional.

Image copyright AFP Image caption Firefighters showed off a pro-referendum banner in Barcelona on Thursday

It is crunch time in Catalonia, where for the past five years the region’s devolved government has demanded a referendum on independence from Spain, the BBC’s Tom Burridge reports from Barcelona.

Under a law passed by the local parliament, Catalan leaders say they may declare independence from Spain within 48 hours of the vote.

“After the official proclamation of the results, which should take a few days. there is a period of 48 hours to proclaim independence but this does not exclude the possibility of us making yet another appeal on the night of the 1st [Sunday] for the need to sit down and talk to resolve this politically,” Catalan President Carles Puigdemont told BBC News on Friday.

The wealthy region of 7.5 million people in north-eastern Spain has its own language and culture, and a high degree of autonomy, but it is not recognised as a separate nation by the Spanish state.

‘Make it difficult’ Image copyright AFP Image caption Hundreds of Catalan farmers are involved

Tractoradas (the word is possibly a play on the Spanish word Armada) could also be seen in Catalan towns like Girona and Tarragona on Friday.

“We are asking for tractors to be parked peacefully near polling stations and, if they try to close them, impede them or make it as difficult as possible,” a member of one farmers’ group, Gerard Batalla, told AFP news agency earlier this week.

“Simply leave them there, without going further.”

A plastic ballot box was shown off to journalists on Friday at a news conference by Catalan Vice-President Oriol Junqueras and Raul Romeva, who handles foreign relations for the Catalan government.

Image copyright EPA Image caption The box they couldn’t seize?

Police have been under orders to confiscate all referendum materials and to prevent public buildings being used as polling stations, while key figures in the referendum campaign have been threatened with prosecution.

However, teachers and students at some schools are organising to keep them open for the vote, using coded messages on social media to make arrangements.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionTeachers chanted and shook keys in support of the Catalonia vote

Hundreds of teachers gathered at the regional government’s headquarters on Thursday, chanting “we will open” and “we will vote”.

A website – escolesobertes.eu (“open schools”) – has been set up so people can track which schools are open.

‘Takes two to tango’

Spain is likely to deploy thousands of national police officers, currently stationed on board two cruise ships docked in Barcelona’s port, to disrupt any voting, and ultimately to guarantee Spanish sovereignty over Catalonia, our correspondent says.

Restrictions have been introduced on commercial light aircraft and helicopters flying over Barcelona this weekend to prevent activists trailing banners, according to local media.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionStudents have declared a pro-independence “strike”

In an interview for the BBC, Spanish government spokesman Iñigo Mendez de Vigo blamed the Catalan government for the stand-off, suggesting it had been both inflexible and one-sided.

“We can change the constitution if there is a consensus in order to change it,” he said.

“There isn’t a consensus in order to change the Spanish constitution, so this is why the Catalan government acts unilaterally. It takes two to tango and in this case the Spanish government was always ready to talk but they didn’t want to dance.”

“There will not be any referendum in Catalonia,” he told a news conference.

Catalan leaders have appealed for help from the European Union, saying Madrid has undermined the bloc’s democratic values. On Friday, European Parliament President Antonio Tajani said he would work towards a political solution.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionWhy some Catalans want independence

He told Italian news agency Ansa the referendum was illegal but that both the Madrid government and the devolved administration in Catalonia needed to reach a settlement on the matter.

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Frank Almonte

Su pastor personal
El pastor, Frank Almonte es un reconocido comunicador y productor de medios de comunicación cristianos de la ciudad de Nueva York, donde junto con su esposa Rosemary, han estado pastoreando el Centro Cristiano Adonai por más de veinticinco años. Es Doctor en Divinidades de la Universidad Cristiana Logos en Jacksonville, Florida y en Filosofía (PhD) de Texas University of Theology. Es también entrenador y mentor en The John Maxwell University. Su pasión por ensanchar el Reino de Dios lo ha motivado a escribir varios libros, entre ellos, Gobierno Apostólico y Riquezas de las Naciones.