The Scotsman

Catalan academic set to face fresh extraditio­n order

● Previous case against Clara Ponsati was dropped

- By CHRIS MCCALL chris.mccall@scotsman.com

Prosecutor­s in Spain are preparing to make a renewed attempt to have an academic who took refuge in Scotland extradited to face charges relating to the failed Catalan independen­ce referendum.

Clara Ponsati, an economics professor at the University of St Andrews, is wanted by authoritie­s in Madrid for her role in an illegal plebiscite organised by the devolved Catalan government in 2017.

The vote, which violated federal Spanish law, was widely boycotted by Unionists in the north-eastern province, but saw a majority of ballots declare support for a separate Catalan state.

Nine of 12 political leaders involved in the referendum were last month given stiff prison sentences by Spain’s supreme court.

A previous attempt to extradite Ponsati, 62, was withdrawn in July last year.

Along with other Catalan leaders, she had been accused of rebellion and misappropr­iation of public funds over the disputed independen­ce referendum.

Prof Ponsati’s full extraditio­n hearing had been due to begin in Edinburgh last summer, with Scottish prosecutor­s prepared to use the centurieso­ld law of treason to try to send her back to Spain.

A Spanish Supreme Court judge dropped the extraditio­n request for the 62-yearold, an ex-catalan education minister.

The decision by Spanish judges to drop the case came after a German court ruled in 2018 that former Catalan regional president Carles Puigdemont could not be sent back to Spain for rebellion, only to face charges of embezzleme­nt connected to alleged misuse of public funds for a referendum on secession.

Sheriff Nigel Ross told Ponsati at the time: “As you know the arrest warrant from Spain has beenwithdr­awnandther­efore it just remains for me formally to discharge you from the European Arrest Warrant.”

Speaking outside the court, Prof Ponsati said: “I am just determined to keep fighting for the freedom of all political prisoners, for civil rights in Catalonia and Spain and for the Republic of Catalonia.”

In a statement, her solicitor Aamer Anwar said it had been a “humiliatin­g defeat for the Spanish state”, which since had “unleashed a wave of repression attacking the Catalan people”.

 ??  ?? 0 Clara Ponsati after an earlier extraditio­n hearing
0 Clara Ponsati after an earlier extraditio­n hearing

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