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Catalan Police Say Independence Vote Divides Their Loyalties

by Associated Press

   BARCELONA, SPAIN --

   A referendum on whether Catalonia should secede from Spain is putting
   intense pressure on the region's police officers, who feel caught
   between their oath to the nation's constitution and loyalty to local
   leaders who have vowed to create a new European state.
   Francesc Vidal, a 16-year veteran of the force known as the Mossos
   d'Esquadra, described the referendum planned for October 1 as a "train
   collision" between Spanish authorities desperate to stop what they
   consider an illegal vote and Catalan separatists who insist that the
   balloting go forward.
   "We only ask that they don't put us in the middle of it," Vidal, a
   leader of the USPAC police union, told The Associated Press. "We don't
   know how to act. We receive orders from both sides."
   The power struggle is the most serious constitutional crisis Spain has
   faced in nearly four decades.
   Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont has pledged to declare independence
   within 48 hours should secessionists manage to stage the secession
   referendum and win it. The move would push the country into uncharted
   waters and set off a national political emergency.
   But if police impede polling stations from opening at schools and other
   government buildings, it will be a victory for Spanish Prime Minister
   Mariano Rajoy in a long battle against the separatists.
   On Saturday, Spain's Interior Ministry announced that it would begin
   coordinating all police efforts in the region related to the vote,
   including the operations of the 17,000-strong Mossos.
   That was rejected by Catalonia's regional interior chief Joaquim Forn,
   who said the Mossos police chief has told Spanish authorities that
   regional leaders would not cede command of the force.
   "The Mossos will never give up the exercise of the powers that are its
   own," Forn said in a statement broadcast on Catalan public television.
   Forn has promised that the Mossos will ensure that the referendum
   happens. He told Catalan newspaper El Punt-Avui: "Not only will we not
   stop the referendum, we will do the exact opposite: We will facilitate
   that the referendum takes place."

   'The tensions are driving fault lines in Catalonia: polls suggest
   roughly half of its 7.5 million residents want to break century-old
   ties with Spain, with the rest wishing to remain a part of the larger
   nation. Fissures have also formed within the Mossos, which was created
   in the early 1980s as part of self-governance granted to the
   northeastern region.

   Serious doubts for many Mossos started in July, when the top two
   regional officials in charge of the police resigned. The regional
   government replaced them with Forn and Pere Soler, men with spotless
   pro-independence credentials.
   While rank-and-file officers are concerned that police leadership may
   not pass down orders from a Spanish judge to stop the vote, a small
   group of hard-core pro-independence Mossos has promised not to stop the
   vote under any circumstances.
   'Anything can happen'

   Jordi Costa, a Mosso stationed in the town of Vilafranca and general
   secretary of the 3,000-member strong CAT police union, said the
   unprecedented situation meant "anything can happen" - but his loyalty
   to Spain's constitution came first.
   "This is exceptional because there is a government that against all
   odds has declared that it will rebel against the law. I think that is
   an error," Costa said. "I swore to the Spanish Constitution just like
   every single one of us Mossos. If something is unconstitutional, it
   cannot be done."
   Just last month, the Mossos were widely praised for their quick capture
   and killing of jihadist-inspired extremists who carried out deadly
   vehicle attacks in Barcelona and a nearby town. Now the same force
   feels trapped by the tense political climate.
   "Our image will be damaged for one side or the other," said David
   Miquel, a 25-year veteran of the Mossos in Barcelona and spokesman for
   the SPC union representing 5,000 officers. "Some who saw us as heroes
   for finishing off the terrorists will now see us as villains. For
   others, we will be heroes for having upheld the law."

   Last week a huge crowd of angry protesters took to Barcelona's streets
   after the Civil Guard, a national police force with a much smaller
   presence in Catalonia, carried out raids on an office of the Catalan
   government. The protesters trashed the Civil Guard's vehicles and
   scuffled with the officers, but Miquel said it took hours until the
   Mossos was ordered to step in and help restore order.
   "My fellow Mossos tell me that they could have done more to help, but
   they were not ordered to," Miquel said. "When you see people destroying
   the patrol cars of your fellow policeman, it's a feeling of impotence.
   What we want is to receive orders that are not coming. They need to
   give us a detailed guide on how to act. Don't leave it in our hands.
   Give us instructions."
   Albert Donaire is a Mosso from a small town of la Cellera de Ter, where
   pro-secession sentiment runs deep. He heads a group of 200 to 300
   like-minded police officers called "Mossos for Independence."
   "My personal decision is not to confiscate any ballot boxes nor close
   any polling stations," Donaire said. "I am not afraid that I will end
   up in prison for defending democracy."
   Like many separatists, Donaire justifies his disobedience of Spanish
   law by citing two acts passed by separatist lawmakers in Catalonia's
   regional parliament. Those measures called for the referendum and
   established a roadmap for independence if the "yes" votes prevail.
   Even though those acts have been suspended by Spain's Constitutional
   Court, Donaire believes the laws are valid because they are protected
   by international law and the right of people to self-determination.
   Faced with the challenge of stopping the vote in the nearly 800
   municipalities, many of them tiny villages, the Interior Ministry has
   rushed more agents of the Civil Guard and the National Police to
   Catalonia.

   "It's an exceptional situation, and we have to prepare for the
   worst-case scenario. There could be a part of the Mossos that won't
   respond," said Luis Mansilla, general secretary in Catalonia of the
   National Police union SUP.
   The extra manpower on the ground in Catalonia will be enough to quash
   the referendum should the Catalan police waver, said Juan Fernandez,
   the spokesman for the Civil Guard's AUGC union.
   "We understand it must not be easy" for the Mossos, Fernandez said.