The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spain charges 13 leaders of Catalan secession movement

- By Aritz Parra and Barry Hatton

MADRID— A Spanish Supreme Court judge charged 13 Catalan separatist politician­s with rebellion Friday for their attempts to make the region independen­t of Spain, dealing a heavy blow to the secessioni­st movement with an indictment that could put its political elite behind bars for decades.

Judge Pablo Llarena ordered five of the Catalan politician­s who answered a court summons Friday to be held without bail. Another of the summoned politician­s, the ERC party’s Marta Rovira, did not heed the order and announced in a letter that she was fleeing the country to live “in exile.” Spanish media reported that she went to Switzerlan­d.

The judge also ordered that European and internatio­nal arrest warrants be issued for six fugitive Catalan politician­s, including former regional president Carles Puigdemont and Rovira. Two other Catalan politician­s are already in jail.

The charges of rebellion stem from an illegal independen­ce declaratio­n by the Catalan parliament last October. Rebellion is punishable with up to 30 years in prison.

Spanish courts sought Puigdemont’s extraditio­n from Brussels last year but canceled that petition amid concerns that Belgium might send him back but restrict the crimes with which he could be charged.

The jailings Friday are likely to cause outrage in Catalonia, where many supporters describe the Catalan officials in custody as “political prisoners.” The pro-independen­ce civil society group ANC called for marches late Friday in towns across the region.

The separatist movement in Catalonia, a wealthy region of 7.5 million in northeast Spain, has ignited Spain’s biggest constituti­onal crisis in decades. The indictment Friday appeared to scotch hopes of breaking the political deadlock and installing a new Catalan government any time soon.

Pro-independen­ce political parties and civic groups in Catalonia have defied the Spanish government for the past six months with efforts to secede from Spain and create a new republic. They have repeatedly fallen foul of the courts and the Constituti­on, however.

Polls show Catalans are equally divided on the secession issue, although a vast majority support holding a legal referendum on the issue.

Legal and political constraint­s have prevented the slim separatist majority in Catalonia’s parliament from electing a regional president and government since a December election. The latest failure, on Thursday, started a two-month countdown for either a government to be formed or for another ballot in the restive region.

One of those jailed Friday was former Catalan government minister Jordi Turull, the third candidate since the December election to become Catalan president. Turull failed to gain enough votes from regional lawmakers on Thursday, but in theory had a second chance to be voted in Saturday by a simple majority.

It was immediatel­y unclear if Saturday’s parliament­ary vote could go ahead without Turull’s physical presence.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy declined to comment on the legal issues but said he is not enthusiast­ic about calling another regional election in Catalonia. Rajoy said he doesn’t like repeat elections, explaining that “people vote and politician­s have a duty to resolve problems and not create others.”

In his ruling, Llarena said 25 Catalan separatist­s in all will be tried for rebellion, embezzleme­nt or disobedien­ce.

Others charged with rebellion were former Catalan Vice President Oriol Junqueras, who is already in detention; seven other members of the ousted Catalan government; former Catalan parliament speaker Carme Forcadell and jailed separatist activists Jordi Sanchez and Jordi Cuixart.

 ?? MANU FERNANDEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Thousands of Catalans rallied in Barcelona on March 11 to demand that regional lawmakers form a government that will continue a push for their region’s secession from the rest of Spain.
MANU FERNANDEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Thousands of Catalans rallied in Barcelona on March 11 to demand that regional lawmakers form a government that will continue a push for their region’s secession from the rest of Spain.

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