The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Catalan leader travels to Scotland for historic talks

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EDINBURGH: After years of holding Catalan separatist­s at arm’s length despite obvious sympathy for their cause, Scotland’s pro-independen­ce First Minister Nicola Sturgeon meets Catalan president Quim Torra for the first time yestersday.

Torra is visiting Scotland and will also meet with Clara Ponsati, a former Catalan minister who is fighting an extraditio­n request by Spain on charges of “violent rebellion” for her role in Catalonia’s failed independen­ce bid in 2017.

Ponsati, a 61-year-old professor in political economy at the University of St Andrews, has been released on bail as she challenges the extraditio­n through the Spanish courts.

Torra and Ponsati are due to give a press conference in Edinburgh at 1000 GMT on her case, after which Torra will meet Sturgeon at her official residence in Bute House.

Michael Keating, professor of political science at the University of Aberdeen, said the meeting between Torra and Sturgeon is possible thanks to “a degree of normality” returning to Catalonia after last year’s events.

There is a long-running affinity between Scottish and Catalan separatist­s.

When Scotland held its independen­ce referendum in 2014 in which the unionist cause won by 55 per cent to 45 per cent, hundreds of Catalans came to aid the independen­ce campaign.

During Catalonia’s own bid last year there were demonstrat­ions of support in the streets of Scotland and several lawmakers from Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party travelled to Catalonia as observers of the vote.

Sturgeon at the time expressed her concern about the crackdown in Catalonia by Spanish authoritie­s, defending the internatio­nal principle of selfdeterm­ination.

But she has kept the Catalan cause at arm’s length, keen to underline the legal basis of Scotland’s own efforts.

“The Scottish nationalis­ts have followed the path of legality very very carefully,” Keating told AFP.

Sturgeon has to act “very carefully” also because she may be preparing to renew pro-EU Scotland’s independen­ce bid as Brexit looms and is concerned about Spanish approval if it seeks to join the European Union, Keating said.

“That issue hasn’t gone away,” he said. — AFP

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