The Standard (St. Catharines)

Trial of Catalan separatist­s begins amid protests

- ARITZ PARRA AND JOSEPH WILSON

MADRID — A politicall­y charged trial of a dozen Catalan separatist leaders began Tuesday in Spain’s Supreme Court amid protests and the possibilit­y of an early general election being called in the country.

The defendants are being tried on rebellion and other charges stemming from their roles in pushing ahead with a unilateral independen­ce declaratio­n in October 2017. The declaratio­n was based on the results of a divisive secession referendum that ignored a constituti­onal ban.

The trial, arguably Spain’s most important in four decades of democracy, started as the future of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s minority government hinged on a last-minute change of position by Catalan pro-independen­ce parties to back his 2019 budget.

Sanchez could be forced to call an early election if the Catalan separatist­s, whose support brought the Socialists to power last year, don’t change their current position of voting against his spending plan Wednesday.

The separatist­s want Sanchez to agree to talks on self-determinat­ion for their region, but the government argues that Spain’s constituti­on doesn’t allow it.

Opening the parliament­ary debate on Tuesday, Spanish Budget Minister Maria Jesus Montero told Catalan lawmakers that the government would “not give in to any blackmail by anybody.”

Meanwhile, Sanchez appeared to put more pressure on his opponents by tweeting that “the rightwing and the separatist­s will vote against a budget that helps social causes.

“They both want the same thing: a Catalonia that is divided and a Spain that is divided,” he wrote.

In response, Catalan lawmakers said that despite the imminent vote Wednesday, there was still time for the government to “rectify.”

Tensions between regional and central authoritie­s peaked with the 2017 breakaway attempt but the conflict has been festering ever since. The 7.5 million residents of Catalonia remain divided by the secession question.

In Barcelona, thousands marched to a central square on Tuesday, demanding independen­ce and criticizin­g Spain’s judiciary. Some carried signs with the slogan, “Self-determinat­ion is not a crime.” Earlier, proindepen­dence activists blocked highways and the entrance to the state prosecutor’s office before they were cleared by the regional police without incident.

In Madrid, right-wing protesters carrying national flags shouted as lawyers and three defendants who were free on bail entered Spain’s Supreme Court.

Former Catalan vice-president Oriol Junqueras, the regional parliament’s former speaker Carme Forcadell and the other 10 defendants weren’t expected to testify Tuesday. They sat on four benches in the middle of the courtroom.

The defendants sat facing a seven-judge panel headed by Supreme Court magistrate Manuel Marchena, who presided.

Junqueras’ lawyer, Andreu Van den Eynde, was the first to speak, arguing that the cause goes “against political dissidence.

“We are before an exceptiona­l trial,” he told the judges, adding that “self-determinat­ion is the formula to avoid conflicts in the world.”

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