The Mercury News

Belgian judge to weigh Spain fight

- By Raf Casert and Joseph Wilson

BRUSSELS >> The fight between Spain and Catalonia’s separatist­s reached a Belgian judge on Sunday after the region’s deposed leader and four ex-ministers surrendere­d in Brussels to face possible extraditio­n to Madrid for allegedly plotting a rebellion.

Hours after former Catalan regional president Carles Puigdemont and the others turned themselves in to Belgian authoritie­s, Puigdemont’s party put him forward as its leader for an upcoming regional election called by the Spanish government — meaning he could end up heading a campaign from Brussels while he fights a forced return to Spain.

Belgian judicial authoritie­s now have to make a decision rife with diplomatic implicatio­ns for fellow European Union members Spain and Belgium and political consequenc­es for Catalonia, the restive Spanish region fighting Madrid for independen­ce.

The five Catalan politician­s who fled to Belgium after Spanish authoritie­s removed them from office on Oct. 28 were taken into custody Sunday on European arrest warrants issued after they failed to show up in Madrid last week for questionin­g.

A Belgian investigat­ive judge has 24 hours after their voluntary surrenders — until 9:17 a.m. local time today — to decide whether to jail them or let them stay free in Belgium while the extraditio­n process runs its course.

The judge also has the option of not detaining them but imposing conditions on their freedom, such as orders to remain in Belgium, Deputy Public Prosecutor Gilles Dejemeppe told The Associated Press.

Dejemeppe said the extraditio­n process could take more than 60 days, well past the Dec. 21 date set for the regional election in Catalonia.

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