Los Angeles Times

Warrants for 5 Catalans revoked

They won’t risk arrest outside Spain but remain in jeopardy if they return home.

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MADRID — A Spanish judge on Tuesday withdrew internatio­nal arrest warrants for ousted Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont and four members of his former Cabinet who have been fighting extraditio­n from Belgium.

A Supreme Court spokesman said the five could still be arrested if they return to Spain, however, because they are still being sought for possible crimes related to the independen­ce bid in the northeaste­rn region of Catalonia.

In a surprise move, Supreme Court magistrate Pablo Llarena said Tuesday that individual warrants no longer apply because the alleged crimes were a group action, according to new evidence.

He also said the targeted politician­s have shown their “intention to return to Spain” to run for regional elections in Catalonia.

But Puigdemont’s Belgian lawyer said the Catalan separatist leader wasn’t planning to return to Spain immediatel­y.

“For the moment he stays in Belgium,” lawyer Paul Bekaert told VTM network, adding that he assumed the extraditio­n process in Belgium against the five Catalans would be ended now.

The five fugitives are facing charges of rebellion, sedition and embezzleme­nt, among others, for their roles in staging an illegal independen­ce referendum in October that led to an independen­ce declaratio­n in the region’s parliament.

The crimes are punishable in Spain with decades in prison.

Spanish, European and internatio­nal arrest warrants for the five who fled to Belgium were issued Nov. 3, after members of Puigdemont’s government who remained in Spain were jailed on provisiona­l charges.

The Spanish court spokesman said the judge’s decision applies to European and internatio­nal warrants, not to the domestic ones. He asked not to be named, citing internal court rules.

Two ex-Cabinet members, including former Vice President Oriol Junqueras, and two separatist activists remain in custody.

Tuesday’s decision seemed to leave up in the air the battle in Brussels over extraditio­n of the five Catalan separatist politician­s. A decision was to have been announced Dec. 14, but the Belgian prosecutor’s office said it was assessing the new situation.

The Belgian judge could reject the Spanish request, agree to send the five back as requested, or reduce the number of crimes that Spain could try them for.

That possibilit­y was mentioned by the Supreme Court judge in a nine-page document issued Tuesday to withdraw the warrants. Responsibi­lity should be shared among all the defendants, Llarena said in the document, adding that diminished charges would mean a “distortion” for those already facing investigat­ion in Spain.

Puigdemont is leading his party’s campaign for the Dec. 21 election called by Spain’s government in an attempt to find a democratic fix to the nation’s worst institutio­nal crisis in nearly four decades.

Campaignin­g officially began Tuesday and early polls are predicting a close race between the parties for and against independen­ce, foreshadow­ing a scenario of difficult post-electoral deals to end the deadlock.

 ?? Manu Fernandez Associated Press ?? CATALONIA’S ousted separatist leader Carles Puigdemont, seen onscreen at a political event in Barcelona, has no plans yet to return to Spain from Belgium.
Manu Fernandez Associated Press CATALONIA’S ousted separatist leader Carles Puigdemont, seen onscreen at a political event in Barcelona, has no plans yet to return to Spain from Belgium.

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