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Exiled Catalan leader arrested in Germany

▶ Former president Carles Puigdemont detained by police after Spanish judge reactivate­s European arrest warrant

- THE NATIONAL

Former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont has been arrested by German police while travelling across the Danish border.

The ousted leader of the semi-autonomous region in Spain was detained yesterday on his way back from Finland to Belgium, where he has been living since October.

“The president was going to Belgium to put himself, as always, at the disposal of Belgian justice,” Mr Puigdemont’s lawyer Jaume Alonso-Cuevillas said on Twitter.

Mr Puigdemont’s capture, aided by Spanish intelligen­ce services, sparked protests of tens of thousands demonstrat­ors in Catalonia’s main city of Barcelona and other towns in the wealthy northeaste­rn corner of Spain. One group clashed with riot police.

In Barcelona, riot police shoved and struck protesters with batons to keep an angry crowd from advancing on the office of the Spanish government’s representa­tive. Police vans showed stains of yellow paint reportedly thrown by protestors.

German police confirmed they had arrested Mr Puigdemont in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein, near the Danish border.

Mr Puigdemont fled to Brussels last year from Spain where he is wanted on charges of sedition and rebellion after his attempt while leader of the Catalan government to declare independen­ce from Madrid.

A Spanish Supreme Court judge had reactivate­d a European arrest warrant for Mr Puigdemont on Friday, after he travelled to Finland to speak at an event.

The exiled politician previously made trips to Denmark and Switzerlan­d to seek support for his secessioni­st movement.

He left Finland on Saturday when it became clear that authoritie­s there would act on the internatio­nal arrest warrant.

Mr Puigdemont was about two thirds of the way through his 2,000-kilometre car journey when he was stopped at a petrol station, 50km into German territory, his lawyer said.

The Spanish state prosecutor’s office said it had made contact with Germany about an extraditio­n request to return Mr Puigdemont, 55, to Spain. Madrid has also activated arrest warrants for five other Catalan politician­s who had fled abroad.

“Following the arrest of Carles Puigdemont, Spain’s state prosecutio­n is in contact with Germany’s state prosecutio­n service and Eurojust to make sure they have all the documentat­ion they need,” a spokesman for the Spanish state prosecutor said.

Mr Puigdemont was expected to appear before a judge last night or today and will be asked whether he will agree to be extradited.

Elsa Artadi, a spokeswoma­n for his Junts per Catalunya party, said he should fight extraditio­n. “Spain does not guarantee a fair trial, only revenge and repression,” she wrote on Twitter.

Spain was plunged into a constituti­onal crisis last year after the referendum vote and the Catalan parliament’s declaratio­n of independen­ce, which was never internatio­nally recognised.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called an election for December as Madrid took over the parliament. Anti-independen­ce party Citizens won the most votes, while secessioni­st parties kept a slim majority in the parliament.

After Mr Puigdemont’s arrest, Albert Rivera, leader of the pro-union Ciudadanos party, tweeted: “Coup leader Puigdemont’s escape has been brought to an end. There should be no impunity for someone who tries to destroy a European democracy, flout democratic laws, fracture co-existence and misuse public funds to do so. The justice system has done its job.”

Protesters marched through Barcelona yesterday in support of the five separatist leaders detained on Friday for their part in the independen­ce bid.

The five were held as part of a prosecutio­n of 13 Catalan leaders for rebellion, a crime that carries a prison sentence of up to 30 years. They were deemed to be flight risks.

Former Catalan Parliament president Carme Forcadell and three former regional ministers were held in custody alongside presidenti­al candidate Jordi Turull.

Secessioni­sts had planned for Mr Turull to be inaugurate­d as president on Saturday morning after Mr Puigdemont withdrew his candidacy this month.

The five join four other separatist­s who were already being detained by the Spanish authoritie­s.

Madrid has also activated arrest warrants for five other Catalan politician­s who had fled abroad

 ?? AP ?? Carles Puigdemont had crossed the Danish border en route to Belgium from a talk in Finland when German police detained him
AP Carles Puigdemont had crossed the Danish border en route to Belgium from a talk in Finland when German police detained him

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