Kuwait Times

Leading Catalan separatist latest to leave Spain

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A former Catalan lawmaker and major figure in the region’s secession drive has fled to Switzerlan­d ahead of a court hearing and may seek asylum there, the sixth separatist to leave Spain in months. In an interview with Switzerlan­d’s Le Temps newspaper published yesterday, Anna Gabriel, a top member of the far-left separatist CUP party, said she had decided to leave as she would not have “a fair trial at home”. She also compared the situation in Catalonia, whose separatist leaders are under investigat­ion for their attempt to break from Spain, to Turkey’s post-coup crackdown.

“I won’t go to Madrid. I’m wanted for my political activities and the government press has already declared me guilty,” she told the paper. “As I wouldn’t get a fair trial at home, I looked for a country that could protect my rights.” Gabriel, in her early 40s, is the latest separatist to leave the country after deposed Catalan president Carles Puigdemont and four former regional ministers went to Belgium shortly after a failed bid to break from Spain. She was due to appear before a Supreme Court judge yesterday over her role in Catalonia’s failed independen­ce

drive, which eventually prompted Madrid to impose direct rule on the region in October, sack its government and dissolve its parliament.

Political asylum?

The Popular Unity Candidacy (CUP) held the balance of power in Catalonia’s parliament during that time, as Puigdemont’s ruling coalition lacked a majority and relied on the smaller party’s 10 seats to pass legislatio­n and advance his independen­ce “roadmap.” It called for action on the street after a banned independen­ce referendum on October 1 was marred by police violence. Gabriel is the party’s most famous member, hugely popular with CUP supporters for her fiery speeches in parliament in favor of independen­ce. In another interview with Swiss television RTS, she said she could seek asylum in Switzerlan­d. The former university law professor said she was first going to try to settle in the country and possibly get academic work. But “if I can’t because there is an extraditio­n request, I will ask for political asylum,” she said in fluent French. It is possible that a Spanish court will launch an arrest warrant when Gabriel fails to turn up at today’s court hearing in Madrid. In Le Temps newspaper, Gabriel said she has got death threats from far-right extremists, and charged that the government was not “doing anything to safeguard our security faced with fascists’ violence.” Gabriel accused Madrid of “repression,” likening the situation in Catalonia with “what is happening right now in Turkey”.

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