30/09/2017 12:00 (UTC)
Spanish Civil guards arrive to Catalonia's Telecommunications and Information Technology Center (CTTI) to check if the telematic vote computer system has been blocked ahead of the '1-O Referendum', following the order of the Superior Court of Justice of Catalonia, in L'Hospitalet, Barcelona, northeastern Spain, 30 September 2017. Hundreds of people have spent the night in different schools and civic centers designated by the regional Government to be polling stations for the '1-O Referendum' in an attempt to prevent the police from avoid their use, as the Superior Court of Justice of Catalonia ordered. Catalonian Government has planned a total of 2,315 polling stations and 6,249 officials in charge of them in all the region, as well as some 7,235 people in charge of securing the chances to vote to some 5,343.358 Catalans. Until the date, the Catalan police (Mossos d'Esquadra) has checked some 1,300 polling stations, of which 163 have been occupied at the moment, meaning a 12 per cent of the total number. EFE/Toni AlbirESPAÑA DEBATE CATALUÑA: L'HOSPITALET (BARCELONA), 30/09/2017.- Agentes de la Guardia Civil han acudido esta mañana al Centro de Telecomunicaciones y Tecnología de la Información (CTTI) de la Generalitat para comprobar si se han bloqueado los servicios informáticos para el voto telemático, como ordenó ayer el Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Cataluña (TSJC). EFE/Toni Albir
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