Business Day

Puigdemont arrested in Germany

- Agency Staff Barcelona/Berlin

Former Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont was detained on Sunday in Germany five months after going into self-imposed exile from Spain, where he faces up to 25 years in prison for organising an illegal referendum on secession in 2017.

Puigdemont had entered Germany from Denmark after leaving Finland on Friday when it appeared police would arrest him there and begin an extraditio­n process requested by Spain.

The detention threatens to worsen the Catalan crisis, which flared in 2017 when the region made a symbolic declaratio­n of independen­ce, prompting Madrid to take direct rule.

Pro-independen­ce groups called on Sunday for a protest in Barcelona in support of Puigdemont outside the offices of the delegation of the European Commission and the German consulate. German police said they had arrested Puigdemont in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein on a European arrest warrant issued by Spain.

He had been detained near a section of the A7 highway near the Danish border, police said.

They did not say exactly where Puigdemont, who had been living in Brussels since late October, was being held but the Spanish press said he was at a police station in the nearby town of Schuby.

German magazine Focus said that Spanish intelligen­ce had informed the federal police that Puigdemont was on his way from Finland to Germany.

He had arrived in Finland on Thursday to meet parliament­arians and attend a conference.

It is not clear if Puigdemont will be immediatel­y extradited.

The Spanish prosecutor’s office said on Sunday it was working closely with counterpar­ts in Germany and EU agency Eurojust to provide all the informatio­n needed to make the European arrest warrant for Puigdemont effective. The European arrest warrant system in place since 2004 makes it easier for EU countries to demand the extraditio­n from other EU states of people wanted for crimes, and removes political decision making from the process.

EU countries issue thousands of such warrants each year.

Puigdemont could take his case to Germany’s highest court, which blocked the extraditio­n to Spain on an EU arrest warrant of a German-Syrian al-Qaeda suspect in 2005.

The case of Mamoun Darkazanli sparked a judicial row between the two countries after Germany’s Federal Constituti­onal Court refused to turn him over, saying that EU extraditio­n laws designed to speed up the delivery of suspects between member states violated German citizens’ rights.

Puigdemont had previously made clear his preference to fight the extraditio­n process from Belgium, where the former Catalan leader was heading at the time of his detention, according to Puigdemont’s spokesman, Joan Maria Pique.

“The president was going to Belgium to put himself, as always, at the disposal of Belgian justice,” Pique said.

The Spanish Supreme Court issued an internatio­nal arrest warrant against Puigdemont in 2017 but withdrew it in December to avoid the risk of Belgian authoritie­s granting him asylum. Leaving Belgium exposed him again to the risk of arrest.

Spain’s Supreme Court ruled on Friday that 25 Catalan leaders would be tried for rebellion, embezzleme­nt or disobeying the state. Supreme Court judge Pablo Llarena also sent five separatist leaders to pretrial jail. Their detention sparked protests across Catalonia.

COURT BLOCKED THE EXTRADITIO­N TO SPAIN ON AN EU ARREST WARRANT OF A GERMAN-SYRIAN AL-QAEDA SUSPECT

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