The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Belgian judge weighs extraditio­n bid for Catalan ex-leader

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BRUSSELS: A Belgian court will consider whether to send axed Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont back to Spain to face charges of rebellion and sedition over his region’s independen­ce drive.

Madrid issued a European arrest warrant for Puigdemont and four of his former ministers after they fled to Brussels last month and ignored a summons to appear before a Spanish judge, claiming they would not get a fair trial.

A judge in Brussels will hear arguments behind closed doors from prosecutor­s and lawyers for the Catalan separatist­s over Spain’s extraditio­n request in the first round of what could become a protracted courtroom battle, with both sides expected to appeal if they lose.

This could leave Puigdemont and his cadres still in Belgium when Catalonia goes to the polls on Dec 21 for an election ordered by Madrid to ‘restore normality’ to the wealthy northeaste­rn region.

“We are going to ask the Belgian judge to respect fundamenta­l EU rights,” Michele Hirsch, a lawyer for two of the ex-ministers told AFP.

“The act of organising a referendum is not a matter for criminal law. It is clearly a political opinion that is being targeted, and the peaceful and democratic execution of a series of events linked to that opinion.” The hearing is the latest act in Spain’s biggest political crisis in decades, sparked by a banned Oct 1 referendum that the Catalan parliament­thenusedas­amandate to declare independen­ce.

Madrid in response dissolved the regional assembly and sacked the Catalan executive, and eight former ministers are currently behind bars in Spain on charges of sedition, rebellion and misuse of public funds.

The five who fled to Brussels went to a Belgian police station on Nov 5 to answer the warrant and were freed that evening after hours of questionin­g, on condition that they agreed not to leave Belgium.

Under Belgian law a decision on a European arrest warrant — brought in by the EU to speed up the once-lengthy extraditio­n process in the bloc — should be made within 60 days.

Thecasewil­lbeheardby­aDutchspea­king judge — defendants in linguistic­ally divided Belgium have the option to choose which language the judge hearing their case speaks, and the Catalans have won support from Dutchspeak­ing Flemish separatist­s in Belgium.

The judge is expected to give an initial judgement in eight to 10 days.

But at the weekend the country’s justice minister warned that with appeals, the process could last up to three months.

Puidgemont, 54, who still describes himself as Catalonia’s ‘president’, has been active in the media since arriving in Belgium, but his efforts to internatio­nalise the crisis have fallen flat with EU leaders closing ranks behind Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

In an interview with Scotland’s former independen­ce leader Alex Salmond on the Kremlinbac­ked RT outlet on Thursday, Puigdemont remained defiant, declaring ‘we will win finally, democracy will prevail’. — AFP

 ??  ?? People hold their mobile phones while standing to create the shape of a giant ribbon in front of the‘Generalita­t’palace (Catalan government headquarte­rs) at the Sant Jaume square in Barcelona 2017 during a demonstrat­ion calling for the release of...
People hold their mobile phones while standing to create the shape of a giant ribbon in front of the‘Generalita­t’palace (Catalan government headquarte­rs) at the Sant Jaume square in Barcelona 2017 during a demonstrat­ion calling for the release of...

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