This article was published today by The New York Times and it was written by Raphael Minder. I have only added some changes to it.
Plaza de la Encarnación - Sevilla - 21st May, 2011 |
MADRID — Tens of thousands of demonstrators across Spain continued and many protests against the established political parties on Saturday, even if they were prohibited because of regional and municipal elections on Sunday.
About 28,000 people, most of them young, spent Friday night in Puerta del Sol, a main square in Madrid, the police said. They stayed even as the protest ban went into effect at midnight under rules that bring an official end to campaigning before the elections. The main reason is said to be that the unemployment rate in Spain is 21 percent.
Beyond economic complaints, the protesters’ demands include improving the judiciary, ending political corruption and changing Spain’s electoral structure, notably by ending the system in which candidates are selected internally by the parties before an election rather than chosen directly by voters.
The protests, which started May 15, have spread gradually across Spain. Spaniards overseas have also held some protests in front of their embassies to show their support for an alternative campaign that has almost eclipsed that of the established parties.
As the campaign ban came into force at midnight, many of the Madrid protesters stuck tape across their mouths to signal that they would continue the demonstration, even if ordered to be silent. “The voice of the people can never be illegal,” read some of the banners, while others argued, “We are not against the system but the system is against us.”
Still, the government said that it would not order the police to use force against protests in Madrid and elsewhere over the weekend, especially given that protests this week have not generated any violence. Interior Minister Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, speaking during a visit to the Murcia region, said that “the police are there to solve problems and not create new ones.”
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/23/world/europe/23spain.html?ref=raphaelminder)Or not? Have you thought about this? What's your opinion?