Catalonia fugitive detained
Carles Puigdemont, a separatist sought by Spain, is held by German police.
BARCELONA, Spain — Carles Puigdemont, the fugitive ex-leader of Catalonia and an ardent separatist, was detained Sunday by German police on an international warrant as he tried to enter the country from Denmark.
Puigdemont’s capture, aided by Spanish intelligence services, sparked massive protest among tens of thousands of demonstrators in Catalonia’s main city of Barcelona and other towns in the wealthy northeastern corner of Spain. One group clashed with riot police.
Spain was plunged into its worst political crisis in three decades when Puigdemont’s government flouted a court ban and held an adhoc referendum on independence for the region in October.
The Catalan parliament’s subsequent declaration of independence received no international recognition and provoked a takeover of the regional government by Spanish authorities that they say won’t be lifted until a new government that respects Spain’s Constitution is in place.
Spain’s state prosecutor office said it was in contact with its German counterparts to carry out its request to extradite Puigdemont to Spain, where he faces charges, including rebellion, that could put him in prison for up to 30 years.
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 protesters.
German highway police stopped Puigdemont on Sunday morning near the A7 highway that leads into Germany, police in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein said.
The German news agency DPA said Puigdemont was taken to a prison in the northern town of Neumuenster. DPA photos showed a van with tinted windows believed to be carrying Puigdemont as it arrived at the prison. Video also showed the van leaving a police station in Schuby.
State prosecutors in Schleswig said Puigdemont will appear in court Monday to confirm his identity. They said in a statement that “the question of whether Mr. Puigdemont has to be taken into extradition custody will then have to be determined by the higher regional court in Schleswig.”
German state prosecutor Ralph Doepper told RTL Television that Puigdemont has been “provisionally detained, he has not been arrested.”
“We are now examining the further procedure, i.e. tomorrow we will decide whether we will file a provisional application for detention with the competent district court, which could lead to extradition detention later on,” Doepper said.
A Spanish police official, who spoke anonymously because he is not authorized to speak on behalf of the state police, said Spain’s National Center for Intelligence and police agents from its international cooperation division helped German police find Puigdemont.
A Spanish Supreme Court judge reactivated an international arrest warrant for Puigdemont on Friday when he was visiting Finland. Spain also has issued five warrants for other separatists who fled the country.
Albert Rivera, the Catalan president of the proSpain Citizens party, celebrated the capture of Puigdemont, whom he accused of trying to carry out a “coup.”
Rivera tweeted: “Trying to destroy a European democracy, ignoring the laws of democracy, shattering our harmonious coexistence and embezzling public funds to do so can’t go unpunished. Justice has done its job.”
But Miquel Coca, a business owner in Barcelona, vowed that the secession push wouldn’t falter.
“All the negative inputs that we have received help us to unite the society even more,” Coca said. “If we can’t have this leader, well, then there will be another. This is a movement of the people, not of one person.”
Puigdemont, 55, is a former journalist and mayor of Girona who was thrust to the forefront of Catalonia’s independence push when he was handpicked by predecessor Artur Mas to become regional president in 2016. He withstood intense political pressure from Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and Spain’s courts as he piloted the secession bid.
Spain originally asked for Puigdemont’s extradition from Belgium after he moved there, but later withdrew the request until Spanish Supreme Court Judge Pablo Llarena concluded his investigation last week. Llarena ruled that 25 Catalan separatists would be tried on suspicion of rebellion, embezzlement or disobedience.
In the meantime, Puigdemont was free to make trips to Denmark, Switzerland and Finland, as part of his effort to gain international support for the secessionist movement.
Puigdemont also was able to successfully run a campaign as the head of his “Together for Catalonia” bloc in a regional election in December in which separatist parties maintained their slim majority in Catalonia’s regional parliament.
He had wanted to be reelected as Catalonia’s regional president — albeit while remaining abroad to avoid arrest — but eventually was blocked by a Spanish court.
Spain’s Constitution says the nation is “indivisible” and any changes to its top law must be made by its national parliament in Madrid.