Arab News

Ousted Catalan leader blasts Spain after Belgium frees him

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BRUSSELS: Catalonia’s sacked separatist leader Carles Puigdemont on Monday denounced Spain as an undemocrat­ic country that “unjustly” jailed his colleagues, his first reaction since he was freed on bail in Belgium.

Puigdemont and four former ministers were released with conditions on Sunday night after turning themselves in to Belgian authoritie­s to face a Spanish warrant for their arrest on charges of rebellion and sedition.

“Released without bail. Our thoughts are with colleagues unjustly imprisoned by a state that is far from democratic norms,” Puigdemont said on Twitter hours after the five were released.

A Spanish judge in Madrid had on Thursday put Puigdemont’s deputy and seven other deposed regional ministers behind bars because of a risk they would flee.

Belgium’s Foreign Minister Didier Reynders insisted it was a legal matter and not one for politician­s to deal with, despite recent criticism of Spain from some Flemish separatist members of his own government.

“We must let the Belgian and Spanish courts do their work,” Reynders told his country’s media.

Puigdemont and his allies escaped to Belgium a week ago after Spain dismissed the Catalan executive and imposed direct rule on the semi-autonomous region following the declaratio­n of independen­ce by the Parliament there last month.

Spain issued European arrest warrants on Friday after Puigdemont and his allies ignored a summons to appear before a judge on allegation­s linked to the move to declare Catalonia an independen­t state.

Puigdemont’s PDeCAT party said on Sunday that he had turned himself in to show his “willingnes­s not to flee from the judicial process but to defend himself in a fair and impartial process, which is possible in Belgium, and highly doubtful in Spain.”

The next court hearing will be in the following 15 days. Belgium has up to 60 days to decide whether to send the Catalans back to Spain.

Puigdemont, who still describes himself as Catalonia’s “president,” has also said he is willing to run as a candidate in the Dec. 21 regional election called by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to “restore normality” to Catalonia.

Puigdemont has said he and his colleagues — Meritxell Serret, Antoni Comin, Lluis Puig and Clara Ponsati — would cooperate with the Belgian authoritie­s, some of whom are sympatheti­c to the ousted Catalan leaders.

“In Belgium, they release us without bail, while in Spain we would be jailed,” Serret said on Twitter.

Puigdemont admitted last week that he had gone to Belgium partly in a bid to take the Catalan issue to the heart of the EU, which has so far backed Madrid over the crisis.

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