The Peterborough Examiner

German court orders Catalan ex-leader’s release on bail

- GEIR MOULSON The Associated Press

MADRID — A German court ruled Thursday that former Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont can be released on bail pending a decision on his extraditio­n to Spain, finding that the most serious accusation against him isn’t punishable under German law. The state court in the northern town of Schleswig said it set conditions including a 75,000-euro ($92,000) payment for the 55-yearold to leave prison. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear when he would be released.

Puigdemont was detained on a European arrest warrant shortly after entering Germany on March 25. He was trying to drive from Finland to Belgium, where has been living since fleeing to escape arrest in Spain. He has been held at a prison in Neumuenste­r.

Spanish authoritie­s accuse Puigdemont of rebellion and misuse of public funds in organizing an unauthoriz­ed referendum last year on Catalonia’s independen­ce from Spain.

German prosecutor­s argued earlier this week that the main charge of rebellion is equivalent to Germany’s criminal offence of treason. German law calls for prison sentences for anyone who “undertakes, by force or through threat of force” to undermine the republic’s existence or change its constituti­onal order.

However, the court disagreed Thursday, saying Puigdemont can’t be extradited for rebellion. It found that the accusation­s against Puigdemont don’t satisfy the precedents set by previous German rulings, which call for a use or threat of force sufficient to bend the will of authoritie­s.

“That is not the case here,” the court said in a statement.

Judges will consider Puigdemont’s extraditio­n on the less serious charge of misusing public funds, meaning that he only could face trial for that if he were returned to Spain. They said that there was no indication he could be “exposed to the danger of political persecutio­n.”

They said there was no indication he could be “exposed to the danger of political persecutio­n.” The court said that because Puigdemont can’t extradited for rebellion he posed less of a flight risk and could be released on bail. Puigdemont’s Spain-based lawyer welcomed the decision. “I always said that I had full confidence in the German judiciary,” Jaume Alonso-Cuevillas wrote on Twitter, adding: “We continue.”

Isabel Mateos, a retiree attending a protest in the Catalan town of Figueres to call for the release of jailed separatist­s, reacted with joy to the news.

“Truth to be told, we didn’t expect it,” she said. “We are totally happy and we’ll celebrate it.” Earlier Thursday, the Spanish National Court charged the former head of Catalonia’s regional police and other regional security officials with sedition over their role in events leading to the banned referendum on independen­ce. Judge Carmen Lamela said in an indictment that Mossos d’Esquadra chief Josep Lluis Trapero was part of an organized plan to seek Catalonia’s secession.

Trapero was hailed in Catalonia as a local hero for the handling of deadly extremist attacks in and near Barcelona last summer. But he then came under severe pressure when Spanish national authoritie­s asked his regional police force to help prevent the Oct. 1 referendum, which triggered Spain’s worst political crisis in decades. Trapero quit the force in October after being demoted when the Spanish government assumed direct rule of the region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada