The Borneo Post

Spain drops European arrest warrant for sacked Catalan leader

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MADRID: Spain dropped its European arrest warrant on Tuesday for Catalonia’s sacked leader Carles Puigdemont and four of his deputies who fled to Belgium, but will arrest the separatist­s if they return, the nation’s top court said.

In a surprise move, Supreme Court Judge Pablo Llarena withdrew the warrant as the five “appear to have shown their intention to return to Spain” to take part in the snap regional polls on Dec 21.

Madrid called the election after Catalan lawmakers declared independen­ce in October, bringing to a head Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

But the judge has retained the Spanish arrest warrant, which means they will be detained upon arrival in the country, the court said.

Paul Bekaert, one of the deposed Catalan president’s lawyers, told Belgium’s L’Echo daily he would “not leave Belgium.”

The judge said the European warrant would complicate the overall probe into the region’s leaders.

Some of them are still in Spain – either in jail or out on bail – and all are facing charges of rebellion, sedition and misuse of public funds.

He said Belgium could reject some of the charges in the warrant, meaning it could agree to the extraditio­n of Puigdemont and the four others – but with restrictio­ns, and only for certain offences.

This in turn would stop Spain from prosecutin­g the restricted offences, thereby creating inequaliti­es with those already held in Spain who would be probed on the full charges, Llarena argued.

It is unclear what charges would have posed a problem, but there has been controvers­y in Spain over the offence of rebellion, which carries up to 30 years in jail and has been criticised as “disproport­ionate” by some critics in the legal world.

Belgian prosecutor­s said a judge would now officially end the extraditio­n proceeding­s.

The unexpected decision comes a day after Puigdemont and his four colleagues attended an extraditio­n hearing in Brussels, with the Belgian judge due to give a decision on Dec 14.

Jaume Alonso Cuevillas, one of Puigdemont’s lawyers, told Catalonia’s TV3 channel he was pleasantly surprised.

“This means yesterday’s hearing went much better than we thought. It pushed Spain’s judicial authoritie­s to withdraw the European warrant to avoid getting a slap from Belgian judicial authoritie­s,” he said.

“The real reason is the fear the extraditio­n would be refused because a fair trial is not guaranteed.”

The decision also comes after the Catalan election campaign kicked off, with Puigdemont speaking to supporters in Catalonia on Monday night via video link.

The Madrid authoritie­s “want to raise as many difficulti­es as possible so we can’t campaign on an equal footing with the other candidates,” he told a party rally in Barcelona.

Madrid called the new elections after the independen­ce declaratio­n on Oct 27, while dismissing Catalonia’s government and suspending the region’s autonomy. It hopes the polls will restore normality to the region.

Twelve of the 13 members of the sacked Catalan government are standing in the election, with Puigdemont and his deputy Oriol Junqueras – who is still in jail – competing to head the separatist camp.

In the last regional election in 2015, separatist parties captured 47.8 per cent of the vote, giving them an absolute majority of 72 seats in the 135- seat Catalan regional parliament.

A poll published Monday by the central government’s Sociologic­al Research Centre (CIS) predicted the three pro-independen­ce parties would get 44.4 per cent of the vote and 66 to 67 seats this time – just short of the absolute majority of 68.

The three parties firmly opposed to independen­ce would get 44.3 per cent and gain 59 to 60 seats, the poll suggested. — AFP

 ??  ?? The Degiorgio brothers and Muscat exit the Law Courts in Valletta, Malta after being charged with the murder of Galizia. — AFP photo
The Degiorgio brothers and Muscat exit the Law Courts in Valletta, Malta after being charged with the murder of Galizia. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Carles Puigdemont
Carles Puigdemont

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