The Phnom Penh Post

Catalan separatist banks on Brexit

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CATALAN separatist Clara Ponsati has not set foot in her native Barcelona for two years for fear of the Spanish authoritie­s. But her circumstan­ces could be about to change thanks to Brexit.

The former education minister in the Catalan regional government of Carles Puigdemont is wanted in Spain for alleged sedition over the failed 2017 independen­ce bid.

An economics professor at St Andrews University in Scotland, her extraditio­n case in being heard at the courts in Edinburgh.

But once Britain leaves the EU on Friday, she will automatica­lly become a member of the European Parliament (MEP) – something she believes will give her immunity from extraditio­n.

After Brexit, additional MEPs elected in the remaining member states will be installed to fill empty seats left behind by the outgoing British deputies.

Following the May 2019 European Parliament elections, Ponsati is due to take one of the five seats reallocate­d to Spain, as an incoming MEP for the Together for Catalonia party.

Once Ponsati joins the European legislatur­e, the 62-year-old hopes to benefit from immunity, as Puigdemont and a former Catalonia health minister Toni Comin already do as MEPs.

“Once I become an MEP, I get immunity from prosecutio­n – and that means that the Spanish justice should withdraw the order of arrest against me,” Ponsati said at her home in the small Scottish town of Leuchars.

“I should be free to walk in Barcelona without being threatened with arrest.”

However, Ponsati knows that the Spanish authoritie­s may not give in so easily.

Madrid has not withdrawn the arrest warrants issued for Puigdemont and Comin.

The Belgian judge who examined their extraditio­n requests decided to suspend them when they became MEPs, meaning they can freely move around Europe – although, as a precaution, they do not return to Spain.

Ponsati believes the Scottish courts will be sensitive to her case.

“It’s for the Scottish judges to decide what the implicatio­ns of my MEP status are. I trust justice in Scotland,” she said.

Furthermor­e, with Brexit, the European Arrest Warrant could lose its validity in the UK and have to be replaced by an internatio­nal extraditio­n request, starting a complex process which Ponsati could claim was politicall­y motivated.

“The fact that Spain is not respecting European law certainly affects how external judges see the way Spanish justices are managing the conflict in Catalonia,” she said.

After voluntaril­y going to the Scottish police in November, Ponsati was released on bail.

Her extraditio­n case is due to begin on May 11, following a preliminar­y hearing on March 5 which could decide on her immunity claim, as she will be an MEP by then.

She has raised more than £166,000 ($217,000) in online donations towards her legal costs.

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