Pro-independence 'coup d'état is alive,' says far-right Vox

People's Party accuses pro-independence movement of acts of "pressure, coercion and violence" against the Supreme Court judges

Image of the far-right party Vox's top officials outside the Supreme Court on February 12, 2019 (by Juan Carlos Rojas)
Image of the far-right party Vox's top officials outside the Supreme Court on February 12, 2019 (by Juan Carlos Rojas) / ACN

ACN | Madrid

February 12, 2019 11:26 AM

The head of the far-right Vox party, Santiago Abascal, says the fact that the Catalan president, Quim Torra, is in the courtroom during the trial of Catalan leaders shows that the pro-independence "coup d'état is alive."

Abascal's party, along with unionist People's Party and Ciutadans, consider the October 2017 referendum and declaration of independence that followed to be a coup d'état.

Vox is the private prosecutor in the independence case in the Supreme Court, and it requests a joint sentence of 702 years behind bars for the leaders on trial –up to 74 years each.

On Tuesday, when the court case began, Abascal called for a "fair trial, without impunity and without pardons." For the Vox head, in Spain "politicians have failed, and courts, prosecutors and the crown have worked."

Meanwhile, Vox official Iván Espinosa said that this was "the most important trial [in] Spain since the inception of democracy, since the constitution of 1978."

Espinosa further deemed what was being tried as "some of the most heinous crimes that could ever be committed against the constitution, probably the most serious crimes you can commit in Spain without bloodshed."

"No one is above Constitution," says People's Party

Meanwhile, the unionist People's Party, which was in power in Spain during the 2017 independence bid, thinks the trial will show that "no one is above the Constitution."

The party's secretary general, Teodoro García Egea, told Spanish radio on Tuesday that the trial is proof that the rule of law "works" in Spain, and he urged the pro-independence parties to abandon "any aspiration" for achieving their goals.

Also on Tuesday, PP released a statement rejecting all acts of "pressure, coercion and violence" by the "secessionists" against the Supreme Court judges, who, the party insists, must be allowed to work with all "guarantees and independence."

On the same day, the People's Party leader in Catalonia spoke to the press at the Catalan parliament and rejected that the trial is "against ideas," instead saying it was against "specific people who knew exactly what they were doing." 

Ciutadans compares Torrent to Forcadell as speaker

The leader of unionist Ciutadans (Cs) in Catalonia Inés Arrimadas spoke in Barcelona about the parliament session being suspended on February 21 ahead of what is set to be a general strike, criticizing the parliament speaker Roger Torrent for the decision. 

Arrimadas said Torrent was "following in the very same footsteps as Mrs. Forcadell," the former parliament speaker in precautionary prison for having allowed a vote on independence, and one of the leaders on trial currently. The Cs leader further accused Torrent and Forcadell of "closing parliament whenever they want, using it as a megaphone for separatism, not abiding by the law."