Security

New riots due to a failed occupation attempt, now in Mataró

After three nights of clashes, the death toll is five arrests and eighteen containers burned.

The Mossos d'Esquadra have reinforced their public order efforts.
ARA
15/04/2025
2 min

BarcelonaJust a month ago, Nightly riots continued in Salt, in Gironès, following the eviction of a local imam. Now, history is repeating itself in Mataró: on Wednesday night, police arrested a person trying to occupy a home. The arrest led to street protests and three nights of clashes in the Cerdanyola neighborhood of the capital of Maresme. So far, the total is five arrests and eighteen burned containers.

The latest night of clashes was this Monday, when around sixty people gathered around Onze de Setembre square, in the same Cerdanyola neighborhood, and clashed with the Mossos d'Esquadra police, throwing eggs and burning containers. The police have arrested a minor for these latest incidents, and he is accused of public disorder, causing damage, and assaulting law enforcement officers. The Mossos d'Esquadra have already reinforced the area with additional law enforcement officers to prevent further clashes. The disturbances occurred primarily on the nights of Wednesday, Thursday, and Monday.

Over the past few days, the Fire Department has received a total of 35 reports of urban fires involving the burning of containers, waste bins, and vehicles. The City Council's damage report shows eighteen containers burned in the neighborhood—and another six in the rest of the city—and three vehicles also burned. "Violence will not occur in the city. It will not go unchallenged," stated Mayor David Bote.

The Housing Union admits that the situation in the neighborhood is "very heated" and that conflicts have been "on the verge of erupting" for some time. "The neighborhood has a structural problem related to access to housing. There is a lot of tension and a lot of anxiety," Pilar Sánchez, spokesperson for the group, told ACN. The union also criticized the police deployment of the Local Police and Mossos d'Esquadra, which, they say, has generated "more tension."

The riots on Monday night occurred after a neighborhood meeting called by the Housing Union itself, which maintains that the meeting was "peaceful," but that an "excessive" police presence ended up inflaming tempers among a group of people who were fighting.

Political Reaction

In response to the incidents, the People's Party (PP) is now demanding an explanation from the Catalan government and requesting the appearance of Interior Minister Núria Parlon before a parliamentary committee. "Catalonia is suffering the effects of growing insecurity," lamented Juan Fernández, the PP spokesperson in Parliament, in a press conference. The MP compared these incidents to those experienced a few weeks ago in Salt, following the eviction of the town's imam. "This isn't a one-day thing or a one-off issue," he emphasized.

Vox has also used the incident to campaign. in situ: Its leader in Catalonia, Ignacio Garriga, has traveled to Mataró and has attacked what he has called "an insurrection by Islamists who do not want to accept the laws." "It is a consequence of the open-door policy towards illegal immigration. We will return the streets to the Catalans," he wrote to X. In this sense, the union spokesperson regrets that there are parties like Vox that take advantage of any opportunity to "generate hatred" and spread "racist speeches."

At the same time, without naming any group in particular, the mayor also said that extremist groups live "in confrontation" and has asked them to abandon this attitude.

stats