Barcelona fans can wave Catalan flags at cup final, says judge

Spanish government ban overturned ahead of Copa del Rey final in Madrid this Sunday

People hold estelada  separatist flags, on Catalonia day “Diada” in central Barcelona. The ban on the flag at Sunday’s final announced  this week by Mariano Rajoy’s caretaker government provoked strong reaction in Catalonia and even divisions within his own party. Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters
People hold estelada separatist flags, on Catalonia day “Diada” in central Barcelona. The ban on the flag at Sunday’s final announced this week by Mariano Rajoy’s caretaker government provoked strong reaction in Catalonia and even divisions within his own party. Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters

A judge has overturned a decision by the Spanish government to ban Barcelona football fans from carrying pro-Catalan independence flags at this Sunday’s Copa del Rey cup final in Madrid.

Jesus Torres ruled that the ban was unconstitutional because it was not proved that the flag "incites violence, racism, xenophobia or any other form of discrimination that goes against human dignity".

The ban, announced earlier this week by Mariano Rajoy's caretaker government, provoked strong reaction in Catalonia and even divisions within his own party.

The Catalan president, Carles Puigdemont, said he would boycott the match, which will be played in the presence of the king. He was joined by the mayor of Barcelona, Ada Colau, and then by the Madrid mayor, Manuela Carmena, who said: "If Ada Colau isn't going, then neither am I."

READ MORE

Meanwhile, in case the judge ruled in the government’s favour, the pro-independence Assamblea Nacional Catalana handed out 10,000 Scottish saltires to supporters to wave in protest.

The decision to ban the estelada, which has all but supplanted the traditional Catalan flag, at the match between Barcelona and Sevilla originated with the Spanish Football Federation but was eagerly taken up by the government.

As the king is always present at the final, the Copa del Rey is often used as a platform by secessionists. During last year's final, played between Barcelona and the Basque team Athletic Bilbao, many of the 98,000 fans in the stadium booed and whistled the national anthem.

Last year, Uefa fined Barcelona €40,000 after fans waved esteladas at the Champions League final in Berlin.

The affair comes only a few days after the Spanish government lodged a formal complaint with Eurovision for banning the ikurrina, the Basque flag, along with the flags of Islamic State and Kosovo. Eurovision appeared to associate the ikurrina with Eta, the Basque terror group, while it is in fact to Basques exactly what the estelada is to many Catalans, the flag of an independent nation in waiting.

Guardian service