The Jerusalem Post

Catalonia leader surrenders to police

Polls show secessioni­sts getting most seats in December election

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BRUSSELS/MADRID/BARCELONA (Reuters) – Sacked Catalonia leader Carles Puigdemont and four associates turned themselves in to Belgian police on Sunday, the Brussels prosecutor’s office said, following Spain’s issuing of an arrest warrant

Puigdemont is wanted by Madrid for actions related to his push for the region’s secession from Spain.

His move comes as two polls suggested pro-Catalonia independen­ce parties will together take the majority of seats in December’s regional election although they may fall just short of a majority needed to revive the secession campaign.

Parties supporting Catalonia remaining part of Spain would divide seats but garner around 54% of the vote, the polls suggested.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called the December 21 election after firing the previous government and imposing direct rule over the autonomous region following a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce by Catalan lawmakers on October 27.

According to a GAD3 survey of 1,233 people conducted between October 30 and November 3 and published in La Vanguardia newspaper, pro-independen­ce parties ERC, PDECat and CUP would take between 66 and 69 seats in the 135-seat parliament.

A second poll taken over the same period for the conservati­ve newspaper La Razon echoed the GAD3 survey, showing pro-independen­ce parties would capture the most votes though still fall just shy of a parliament­ary majority with 65 seats.

Other seats would be generally divided between parties supporting the region continuing to be part of Spain, but they parties are not allied.

Voter participat­ion, however, will rise to a record of 83%, the GAD3 poll showed.

Catalonia’s statehood push has tipped Spain into its worst political crisis since its return to democracy four decades ago as surging pro-secession sentiment in the region has in turn kindled nationalis­m across the country.

Puigdemont traveled to Belgium shortly after Madrid took control and now faces charges for rebellion, sedition, misuse of public funds, disobedien­ce and breach of trust relating to the secessioni­st campaign.

On Saturday, Puigdemont – who PDECat said on Sunday would lead the party in the election – called for a united Catalan political front in the face of the elections.

On Thursday, nine members of his sacked cabinet were ordered by Spain’s High Court to be held on remand pending an investigat­ion and potential trial.

One member of the dismissed cabinet, Santi Vila, was freed after paying bail of €50,000 euros on Friday. The other eight could remain in custody for up to four years.

According to the GAP3 survey, 59% believed legal action against Puigdemont was unjustifie­d while 69.3% said that the jailing of the Catalan politician­s would give the independen­ce cause a boost at the ballot box.

Catalan civic groups Asamblea Nacional Catalana and Omnium Cultural – whose leaders were imprisoned last month on sedition charges – called for a general strike on November 8 and a mass demonstrat­ion on November 11 to protest the detentions.

A rally in Barcelona on Sunday, however, attracted just a few hundred people, a long way from the hundreds of thousands to join pro-independen­ce marches in October, many waving the regional flag and carrying protest signs.

 ?? (Vincent West/Reuters) ?? EUNATE URRUTIA OLEAGA, 32, casts her vote in a non-binding consultati­on organized by Gure Esku Dago (In Our Hands), which asked citizens if they wish to be part of an independen­t Basque state, in Mundaka, yesterday. Thousands of Basque protesters took...
(Vincent West/Reuters) EUNATE URRUTIA OLEAGA, 32, casts her vote in a non-binding consultati­on organized by Gure Esku Dago (In Our Hands), which asked citizens if they wish to be part of an independen­t Basque state, in Mundaka, yesterday. Thousands of Basque protesters took...

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