‘Trial of century’ has Spain riveted
Catalan leaders face 25 years for rebellion charges
MADRID • Lawyers for Catalan politicians facing charges of rebellion urged judges to remain impartial, as Spain’s politically charged “trial of the century” began Tuesday.
“Act as judges, not as saviours of the nation,” said Jordi Pina, defence lawyer for three of the 12 accused on the opening day of the trial in which pro-independence politicians face jail sentences of up to 25 years for their roles in the 2017 independence referendum.
The nation tuned in to watch the proceedings being televised live as nine are charged with rebellion and three face lesser charges of disobedience and misuse of public funds.
“This case targets political dissidence,” said Andreu Van den Eynde, the lawyer for two defendants including Oriol Junqueras, Catalonia’s former vice president.
The lawyer accused authorities of violating the defendants’ fundamental rights, and argued the accusations of crimes such as rebellion and sedition were completely disproportional.
“No one in Europe understands the severity being applied,” he said, adding that the trial is an attack on freedom of expression, the right to protest, ideological liberty and “political dissidence.”
The trial, arguably Spain’s most important in four decades of democracy, began as the future of Pedro Sanchez’s minority government hinges on last-minute talks with Catalan pro-independence parties to back his 2019 budget.
On Wednesday, Catalan members of Spain’s parliament are poised to vote down the prime minister’s budget bill, which would almost certainly trigger a snap election in a matter of months.
Quim Torra, Catalonia’s president, took part in a small protest against the trial outside the building before taking a seat in the courtroom to show support for the accused.
Van den Eynde said the investigation into the accused, most of whom have been held in custody for the past 11 months or even longer, had been conducted like a “witch hunt,” in which the facts had been twisted to fit the harshest possible accusations.
The crime of rebellion requires the existence of a “violent public uprising” in an attempt to change the constitutional order. The key events on which the accusations are based are a mass demonstration in the streets of Barcelona in protest at Guardia Civil agents arresting Catalan government officials, and the holding of the referendum on Oct 1 2017, despite it having been banned by Spain’s constitutional court.