
Policías antidisturbios quitan barreras que les lanzaron algunas personas, mientras los agentes tratan de llegar a un colegio en Barcelona asignado por el gobierno catalán como centro de votación para el referendo independentista que Madrid considera ilegal, el domingo 1 de octubre de 2017. (Foto AP/Felipe Dana)
FOTOS AP y AFP
- Policías antidisturbios quitan barreras que les lanzaron algunas personas, mientras los agentes tratan de llegar a un colegio en Barcelona asignado por el gobierno catalán como centro de votación para el referendo independentista que Madrid considera ilegal, el domingo 1 de octubre de 2017. (Foto AP/Felipe Dana)
- A protester falls on the ground after being hit in the face by a rubber bullet shot by Spanish National Police near the Ramon Llull school assigned to be a polling station by the Catalan government in Barcelona, Spain, early Sunday, 1 Oct. 2017. The Spanish government and its security forces are trying to prevent voting in the independence referendum, which is backed by Catalan regional authorities. Spanish officials had said force wouldn’t be used, but that voting wouldn’t be allowed. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)
- Journalist take pictures as a volunteer, acting as polling station official, unseals a ballot box after the polling station closed at the Escola Industrial in Barcelona, Spain, Sunday, Oct. 1, 2017. Spanish riot police, acting on orders from the Spanish government to stop the voting, which Spain’s Constitutional Court had declared illegal, smashed their way into Catalan polling stations Sunday to try to halt a disputed referendum on independence.(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
- Officials empty a ballot box to count the votes at a school listed to be a polling station by the Catalan government in Barcelona, Spain, Sunday evening, Oct. 1, 2017. During the day Spanish riot police smashed their way into polling stations to try to halt a disputed independence referendum and fired rubber bullets at protesters. (AP Photo/Santi Palacios)
- People celebrate after the closing of polling stations outside the ‘Espai Jove La Fontana’ (La Fontana youth center) on October 1, 2017 in Barcelona. Spanish riot police stormed voting stations today as they moved to stop Catalonia’s independence referendum after it was banned by the central government in Madrid. At least 92 people were confirmed injured as hundreds tried to prevent the polling stations from being closed, Catalan officials said. A total of 465 people were treated at hospitals and health centres, while Spain’s interior ministry said 12 police officers were injured. / AFP / PAU BARRENA
- A Spanish police officer is pictured outside the Ramon Llull polling station in Barcelona October 1, 2017 during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Spanish riot police fired rubber bullets and forced their way into activist-held polling stations in Catalonia on Sunday as thousands flooded the streets to vote in an independence referendum banned by Madrid. / AFP / Fabio Bucciarelli
- A woman shouts during clashes with Spanish police officers outside the Ramon Llull polling station in Barcelona October 1, 2017 during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Spanish riot police fired rubber bullets and forced their way into activist-held polling stations in Catalonia on Sunday as thousands flooded the streets to vote in an independence referendum banned by Madrid. / AFP / Fabio Bucciarelli
- A Spanish police officer grabs a man during clashes outside the Ramon Llull polling station in Barcelona October 1, 2017 during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Spanish riot police fired rubber bullets and forced their way into activist-held polling stations in Catalonia on Sunday as thousands flooded the streets to vote in an independence referendum banned by Madrid. / AFP / Fabio Bucciarelli
- A man shouts at Spanish police officers outside the Ramon Llull polling station in Barcelona October 1, 2017 during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Spanish riot police fired rubber bullets and forced their way into activist-held polling stations in Catalonia on Sunday as thousands flooded the streets to vote in an independence referendum banned by Madrid. / AFP / Fabio Bucciarelli
- People clash with Spanish police officers outside the Ramon Llull polling station in Barcelona October 1, 2017 during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Spanish riot police fired rubber bullets and forced their way into activist-held polling stations in Catalonia on Sunday as thousands flooded the streets to vote in an independence referendum banned by Madrid. / AFP / Fabio Bucciarelli
- People applaud as a man in wheelchair leaves a polling station after votin at a polling station in Barcelona, on October 01, 2017, during a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. Madrid has vowed to stop the referendum from going ahead, closing polling stations, seizing millions of ballot papers, detaining key organisers and shutting down websites promoting the vote. / AFP / Josep LAGO
- Unas personas se forman para participar en el referendo independentista catalán en una escuela de Gracia, Barcelona, España, el 1 de octubre de 2017. Madrid considera ilegal la consulta y han dicho que no la permitirán. (AP Foto/Bob Edme)
- Voters crowd the room at a school assigned to be a polling station by the Catalan government at the Gracia neighborhood in Barcelona, Spain, Sunday, 1 Oct. 2017. The Spanish government and its security forces are trying to prevent voting in the independence referendum, which is backed by Catalan regional authorities. Spanish officials had said force wouldn’t be used, but that voting wouldn’t be allowed. (AP Photo/Bob Edme)
- Un policía antidisturbios dispara una bala de goma hacia personas que tratan de llegar a un sitio de votación en una escuela en Barcelona, España, para participar en el referendo independentista catalán que Madrid considera ilegal, el 1 de octubre de 2017. (Foto AP / Emilio Morenatti)