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Pro-independen­ce Catalans plan protest in Barcelona

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>> BARCELONA: A protest was planned in Barcelona yesterday calling for the release of jailed separatist leaders, the day after pro-independen­ce Catalan parliament­arian Carme Forcadell was freed on bail.

Separatist­s called on supporters to match the annual turnout of Catalonia’s national day, when hundreds of thousands gather in the city. The demonstrat­ion was due to take place from 5pm local time.

Ms Forcadell, the sacked speaker of Catalonia’s parliament, left a prison near Madrid on Friday hours after supporters posted her bail of €150,000 (5,795,973 baht), ending her brief detention.

A judge at the Supreme Court in Madrid on Thursday had ordered Ms Forcadell to be held on charges of “rebellion” — which carries a maximum jail term of 30 years — as Spain’s worst political crisis in a generation rumbles on.

She was one of several dismissed Catalan officials to be detained after their shock decision last month to declare the region of 7.5 million people independen­t from Spain.

Ms Forcadell appeared at the Supreme Court in Madrid on Thursday along with five former Catalan lawmakers.

The others were given a temporary reprieve by the judge, who said they must pay 25,000 euros each within a week or be detained.

Acting judge Pablo Llarena said his decision to grant bail was made after they either “renounced all future political activity” or agreed to respect the law, according to a court document.

The Catalan crisis has caused shock waves across the European Union (EU), prompting nearly 2,400 businesses to move their legal headquarte­rs and re-register outside of the wealthy northeaste­rn region.

Lawmakers opted to split from Spain, claiming they had a mandate after a referendum on Oct 1 in which 90% of voters backed secession.

But less than half of the electorate took part in a vote denounced as illegitima­te by Madrid, and Catalans themselves remain deeply split over the question of whether their region should break away from the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy.

After the declaratio­n, Madrid dismissed Catalonia’s government, dissolved parliament, suspended the region’s autonomy and called new elections for the region next month.

Deposed Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont, who fled to Belgium where he is facing extraditio­n back to Spain, has criticised the EU for backing Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in the crisis.

Mr Puigdemont, alongside four former Catalan ministers, are expected to appear before a Belgian judge next week over the matter of the extraditio­n warrant.

Eight members of his former cabinet were detained last week on charges of sedition, rebellion and misuse of public funds for their role in the independen­ce push.

Protesters blocked roads and train lines across Catalonia on Wednesday, provoking commuter anger in a strike called by a pro-independen­ce union over the arrests.

Mr Puigdemont, a 54-year-old former journalist, says he will not get a fair trial in Madrid, and has called on authoritie­s to release Catalan “political prisoners”.

Mr Puigdemont and Ms Forcadell have lodged complaints against Madrid with the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights, it emerged on Friday.

A court spokesman said four Catalan motions had been filed last month by the two Catalan leaders as well as dozens of Catalan parliament­arians.

The court has yet to decide whether to handle the cases.

Ms Forcadell, a life-long advocate of Catalan independen­ce, has said that as parliament­ary speaker she did not have the power to stop the Oct 27 vote in which lawmakers backed a break from Madrid.

Mr Rajoy has urged voters to turn out en masse for the Dec 21 elections in Catalonia, a region that accounts for a fifth of Spain’s GDP.

Spain said on Friday it had noted news manipulati­on about the Catalan crisis on social media originatin­g “from Russian territory”, adding the issue would be raised at an upcoming EU ministers meeting.

 ??  ?? INDEPENDEN­T MINDED: People protest the imprisonme­nt of pro-independen­ce leaders and to demand their freedom, at Cathedral square in Barcelona, northeast Spain, on Wednesday.
INDEPENDEN­T MINDED: People protest the imprisonme­nt of pro-independen­ce leaders and to demand their freedom, at Cathedral square in Barcelona, northeast Spain, on Wednesday.

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