The Asian Age

New Catalan leader takes oath, shuns Constituti­on

Torra pledges to ‘ the will of the Catalan people’ instead of Constituti­on

- DANIEL BOSQUE

Quim Torra, Catalonia’s new separatist leader, was sworn in on Thursday during a brief ceremony without central government representa­tives in which he avoided promising to obey the Constituti­on and pledged instead to follow “the will of the Catalan people”.

The ceremony marks the end of nearly seven months of political limbo in the northeaste­rn Spanish region, which has been under direct rule from Madrid since the central government deposed Catalan President Carles Puigdemont following a failed declaratio­n of independen­ce on October 27.

“I promise to loyally fulfil the duties of the post of regional President being faithful to the will of the Catalan people represente­d by the Catalan parliament,” Torra said as he was sworn in, using the same formula as his predecesso­r and mentor Puigdemont.

The 55- year- old did not promise to obey the Constituti­on nor the statute that regulates Catalonia’s autonomy.

He appeared flanked only by a Catalan flag, without the traditiona­l Spanish flag and portrait of the king that protocol states must be present, in a small side- room of the regional government building in Barcelona.

Spanish Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis criticised the ceremony, saying it done “on the sly”, as if Torra “were a secondrate president”.

The hardline separatist Torra was handpicked by Puigdemont, who is currently in Berlin awaiting potential extraditio­n to Spain, where he faces jail on charges of rebellion and misuse of public funds.

He has stressed he is merely a “caretaker president” as he awaits the return of Puigdemont, whom he considers the “legitimate” leader, and has pledged to keep fighting for independen­ce from Spain. Torra’s swearing- in ceremony only lasted a few minutes and the central government decided not to send any representa­tives in a sign of tensions between the two.

There were no representa­tives of political parties or civil society either.

As a deferentia­l gesture towards Puigdemont, Torra did not put on the medallion that regional presidents usually wear when they are sworn in.

Now Torra needs to form a government, a prerequisi­te for Madrid to lift direct rule.

The ceremony marks the end of nearly seven months of political limbo in the northeaste­rn Spanish region, which has been under direct rule from Madrid since ouster of Carles Puigdemont

 ??  ?? Quim Torra
Quim Torra

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