The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ousted Catalan leader: EU should support separatist­s

200 mayors from region join him at rally in Brussels.

- By Lorne Cook, Aritz Parra and Ciaran Giles

Catalonia’s ousted leader vowed Tuesday to prolong the fight for independen­ce from Spain and urged the European Union to speak out over the jailing of Catalan officials in a rebellion case.

Carles Puigdemont’s comments came at a campaign-style rally in Belgium’s capital attended by around 200 mayors from Catalonia who greeted the deposed president with chants of “president” and “freedom.”

The mayors raised their walking sticks, a symbol of mayoral power in Spain, in the air at the end of his speech and the crowd sang the Catalan anthem.

“We will never renounce this ideal of a country, of this notion of democracy,” Puigdemont told the mayors, gathered in a central Brussels art museum.

Flanked by four associates who fled Spain with him, Puigdemont challenged the Spanish authoritie­s and internatio­nal community to accept the results of a snap Catalan election Dec. 21 if separatist­s win.

Puigdemont and his colleagues could face 30 years in jail in Spain on charges of rebellion, sedition and embezzleme­nt if Belgian justice authoritie­s agree to extradite them. Nine former Catalan government members have already been sent to jail in Spain. One of them was released on bail during the investigat­ion.

“We are the legitimate gov- ernment of Catalonia and we are going to carry on,” former regional government member Meritxell Serret told the audience, her voice breaking with emotion. Puigdemont also challenged the European Union to finally make its voice heard. Catalan officials at the Brussels event Tuesday urged European Union leaders to take up the Catalan cause.

“Is this the Europe you want, is this the Europe you want to build, with a democratic­ally elected government in jail?” he said before a group of mayors held up big letters spelling “Help Catalonia.”

The leaders of all the EU’s main institutio­ns are party allies of Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy. They have refused to criticize his government, and only reacted very cautiously to police vio- lence during the Oct. 1 independen­ce referendum in Catalonia.

Hours earlier, Puigdemont did an interview in Brussels with Catalan public radio.

The separatist leader said that there is an “absolute disconnect between the interests of the people and the European elites” and that Catalonia’s problem is an “issue of human rights that requires maximum attention.”

Puigdemont is fighting extraditio­n to Spain, where other members of the ousted Cabinet have been sent to jail while awaiting the results of a probe for allegedly implementi­ng a strategy to secede from Spain. His next hearing before a Belgian court is Nov. 17.

Catalan independen­ce is now the second cause of concern for Spaniards, behind unemployme­nt and ahead of corruption, according to the latest government-run poll. Before the illegal independen­ce referendum that deepened the political crisis, the issue was only ninth in the ranking of concerns by the CIS survey.

Spanish central authoritie­s are now in direct control of the northeaste­rn region, where the early election next month is shaping into a tight race between separatist and pro-union forces.

The civil society group that spearheade­d the Catalan endeavor for secession from Spain on Tuesday called for the region’s separatist political parties to run in a “unified pro-independen­ce ticket.” In a statement, Assemblea Nacional Catalana said such a joint coalition should include jailed separatist activists and the members of the deposed Catalan Cabinet as candidates.

 ?? GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT / AP ?? Catalan mayors rally in support of the ousted Catalan government Tuesday outside the European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium. Spain’s central authoritie­s now control the northeaste­rn region, where the early election next month is shaping...
GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT / AP Catalan mayors rally in support of the ousted Catalan government Tuesday outside the European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium. Spain’s central authoritie­s now control the northeaste­rn region, where the early election next month is shaping...

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