Catalonia crisis: Spain could allow referendums, says FM
The Spanish government will consider holding a nationwide referendum on changing the constitution to allow for legal independence referendums, the foreign minister says.
In an interview with the BBC, Alfonso Dastis said the move was in recognition of recent developments in Catalonia.
The Catalan government was deposed after a banned referendum and unilateral declaration of independence.
Protests were held against the detention of the region's ex-leaders.
Spain's constitutional court has ruled that the declaration of independence was "unconstitutional and void".
What has the foreign minister said?
"We have created a committee in parliament to explore the possibility of amending the constitution to be able to accommodate better the aspirations of some of the Catalan people," Mr Dastis told the BBC.
"We acknowledge there is a political situation that deserves to be looked at but, in any case, it's clear that the decision will be taken, will have to be taken by all Spaniards."
He also said he was sorry if people got hurt during the banned referendum last month, but that there was no disproportionate use of force.
He had previously said some pictures of violence were "fake".
An olive branch to separatists
By Gavin Lee, BBC News, Barcelona
This appears to be an olive branch to supporters of separatism in Catalonia, who are protesting once again across the region. It offers the prospect of a referendum to change the Spanish constitution and therefore make it legally possible to hold a referendum on Catalan independence.
But what that means in effect, is that the entire population of Spain - 47 million people - would vote on whether Catalonia should have the right to self-determination.
Alfonso Dastis said the legal change might help resolve the Catalan crisis for future generations.
But it is a far cry from what deposed Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont had called for, the right for Catalans only to decide.
What about the protests?
Some major roads and rail services were still blocked as part of demonstrations called by pro-independence groups.
Minor scuffles were reported earlier when police moved in to remove protesters. Hundreds of people also gathered in front of Catalonia's presidential palace in Barcelona.
A call for a general strike was not backed by the region's major unions, and shops and businesses opened as normal. Universities and some schools were affected.
Eight politicians are being held in an investigation by Madrid authorities into alleged rebellion and sedition linked to the declaration of independence.
What else is happening?
In a speech to parliament, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called for a big turnout in the snap election called for 21 December so that Spain could get over the crisis.
Pro-independence parties failed on Tuesday to reach an agreement to form a united front for the vote.
Sacked Catalan President Carles Puigdemont and four former advisers fled to Belgium, and an investigating judge is yet to decide whether to execute an EU arrest warrant issued by a Spanish judge last week.
Mr Puigdemont has been freed on bail and is scheduled to appear in court on 17 November.
In other developments:
- Spain's Environment Minister Isabel García Tejerina accused Mr Puigdemont of launching an attack on the entire Spanish state with his illegal declaration of independence
- El Mundo (in Spanish) newspaper released a document which allegedly shows that Mr Puigdemont's cabinet had several details ready for an independent Catalonia, including its budget, in June
- The editor of satirical magazine El Jueves appeared in court over a satirical story (in Spanish) that suggested that riot police deployed to stop the referendum had "finished" the region's supply of cocaine
- Belgium's Prime Minister Charles Michel denied his government was in crisis over Mr Puigdemont's presence, an issue that risks exposing separatist divisions in the country.