The Scotsman

A sinister side to Sturgeon’s new Catalan friend

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To general relief, the Spanish courts have abandoned pursuit of internatio­nal arrest warrants for the ringleader­s in the Catalan referendum, thereby sparing us months of martyred grandstand­ing.

Our own resident fugitive, Carla Ponsati, can now decide of her own free will whether to continue doing whatever she does in St Andrews or return to face the music. As an academic, she had doubtless researched the legal implicatio­ns of her political actions.

Dr Ponsati’s president, Quim Torra, has been a recent visitor to Scotland and he was greeted effusively by Scotland’s First Minister – an appropriat­e encounter between the heads of two devolved government­s. We have heard a lot recently about presidents who say bad things being unwelcome on our shores. So I was grateful to a Scotsman letter-writer for drawing attention to Mr Torra’s past utterances, prompting my own modest researches. In Mr Torra’s considered view, Catalonian­s who speak Spanish rather than Catalan are “scavengers, vipers, hyenas”, not to mention “beasts with human shape”. Spaniards “know only how to plunder” while immigratio­n threatens that “the nation disintegra­tes like sugar in a glass of milk”.

Volumes more in the same vein prompted the leading Catalan anti-racism organisati­on to state: “We reject the discourse that Mr Torra has used repeatedly ... a dangerous, irresponsi­ble and unacceptab­le discourse, based in prejudices.”

Ms Sturgeon has declared Dr Ponsati “a credit to Scotland”. Perhaps she could earn this accolade by condemning the language and prejudices of her close colleague, Mr Torra. Meantime, we must watch which other charmers from Europe’s “civic nationalis­t” fringes will adorn Bute House, surrounded by saltires and silence despite the most obnoxious views.

 ??  ?? First Minister Nicola Sturgeon chats with the Catalan President, Quim Torra, at Bute House
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon chats with the Catalan President, Quim Torra, at Bute House

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