The Telegram (St. John's)

Puigdemont in hiding

With associates in jail, Catalan leader mulls legal options

- BY LORNE COOK

As members of the Catalan regional government spent their first night in jail in Spain, ousted president Carles Puigdemont was weighing his legal options in hiding in Belgium.

Extraditio­n requests between European Union countries are usually a simple affair because they recognize each other’s laws, but Puigdemont’s case is rare and could be hampered by political considerat­ions.

“We have to admit that because this is a very special case it could pose political questions,” said Maxime Chome, a lawyer and legal expert at Brussels Free University. “It’s not an arrest warrant for a drug trafficker, which would be the more typical kind.”

What is clear is that if Spain issues a European arrest warrant for him, Puigdemont would have to be quickly brought before a Belgian judge.

“He must be heard within 24 hours by an investigat­ing judge who will explain the motives for the European arrest warrant, to say that he has the right to a lawyer and also to offer for him to voluntaril­y return to Spain, something that he can also refuse to do,” Chome told The Associated Press.

One challenge, Chome said, is to decide what type of offences and charges will be listed in the warrant, as Belgium does not have the equivalent charges of sedition and rebellion that Puigdemont and his associates could face. But there is a legal equivalent for embezzleme­nt, another of the possible charges pending in Spain.

“For a European arrest warrant to be issued, the offence has to be more or less the same in Belgian law and in Spanish law. Sedition and rebellion, there isn’t really the same thing in the Belgian penal code, but there is an offence for misuse of public funds,”chome said.

Misuse of funds could be chosen if the Spanish authoritie­s consider that Puigdemont illegally used public money to hold the outlawed independen­ce referendum on Oct. 1.

The legal procedure could take time, and it means that Puigdemont would remain in Belgium, as he would not necessaril­y have to appear in a Spanish court.

“The Spanish courts really want him to go to Spain. But there are other possibilit­ies. He could be given the right to stay here and be heard by the Belgian courts ... possibly with the participat­ion of a Spanish judge,” Chome said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Demonstrat­ors holding banners reading in Catalan “freedom for the political prisoners” gather outside the Catalonian Parliament to protest against the decision of a judge to jail ex-members of the Catalan government, in Barcelona, Spain, Thursday. A...
AP PHOTO Demonstrat­ors holding banners reading in Catalan “freedom for the political prisoners” gather outside the Catalonian Parliament to protest against the decision of a judge to jail ex-members of the Catalan government, in Barcelona, Spain, Thursday. A...

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