Barcelona Match Played Behind Closed Doors After Vote Clashes
Barcelona/ Madrid. No supporters were able to watch Barcelona’s 3-0 win over Las Palmas on Sunday (01/10) as the game was played behind closed doors, following clashes between police and voters in Catalonia over a disputed independence referendum.
Spanish riot police burst into polling stations across Catalonia, confiscating ballot boxes and voting papers to try to halt the banned referendum on a split from Spain as Madrid asserted its authority over the rebel region.
The clashes prompted Barcelona, the club of the Catalan capital, to announce the Las Palmas match would be played in front of an empty Nou Camp stadium.
"FC Barcelona condemns the events which have taken place in many parts of Catalonia today in order to prevent its citizens exercising their democratic right to free expression," the club said on its website.
"Given the exceptional nature of events, the Board of Directors have decided that the FC Barcelona first-team game against Las Palmas will be played behind closed doors following the Professional Football League’s refusal to postpone the game."
The lack of fans in the Nou Camp, which has a capacity of 99,000, seemed not to harm Barcelona on the pitch as Sergio Busquets opened the scoring early in the second half.
Top scorer Lionel Messi then struck twice to seal Barca’s seventh straight win of the Liga season which extended their lead at the top of the table to five points.
Las Palmas had said earlier in the day that they would wear the Spanish flag on their jerseys for the match to support the unity of Spain. "We decided to wear a small Spanish flag on our shirts today to display unequivocally our hope in the future of this country," their statement said.
The game was thrown into chaos when reports in the Spanish media said the club had postponed the game less than an hour before kick off, and supporters were not allowed through the Nou Camp gates.
Both Las Palmas and Barcelona published their starting lineups for the game, with the announcement that the game would go ahead without supporters coming 25 minutes before kickoff.
Spanish soccer federation rules state that a game can only be postponed if the police cannot guarantee the safety of spectators.
If Barcelona had suspended the game without the consent of the federation, they would have automatically lost the game 3-0 and had a further three points deducted.
Barcelona supporters group Grada d‘Animacio, which organizes the "singing section" behind one of the goals at the Nou Camp, pledged to invade the pitch, if the game went ahead, in protest at the police crackdown.
Former Barcelona captain Xavi Hernandez also condemned the police action, in a video released on social media.
"What is happening in Catalonia today is shameful," said Xavi, who has made more appearances for Barcelona than any other player.
"It’s unacceptable that people are not allowed to vote in a democratic country. All my support goes to the people who are peacefully trying to exercise their right to vote. Long live Catalonia."
Guardiola's Concern
Former Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola expressed dismay on Monday at the violence that marred Catalonia’s independence vote, which he said should have led the club to postpone their match against Las Palmas.
"Barcelona against Las Palmas should never have been played, not at all," Catalonia-born Guardiola, now manager of Premier League high-fliers Manchester City, told Catalan radio station RAC1.
"In Catalonia they have injured a lot of people, people who only went to schools to vote," said Guardiola, who also captained Barcelona during a stellar playing career.
"The images are not deceptive. There were people who went to vote and they were violently attacked."
Catalan officials said 840 people had been injured while trying to cast their ballots.
The handling of the referendum by authorities in Madrid, who had declared it illegal, has left Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy facing Spain’s biggest constitutional crisis in decades.
Reuters
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