The Jerusalem Post

Ousted Catalan leader accepts new election, says it will be ‘long road’ to independen­ce

Puigdemont insists he’s not seeking asylum in Belgium • Calm in Catalonia after takeover

- By ROBERT-JAN BARTUNEK and RAQUEL CASTILLO

BRUSSELS/MADRID (Reuters) – Catalonia’s ousted leader Carles Puigdemont on Tuesday agreed to the snap election called by Spain’s central government when it took control of the region to stop it breaking away, but he said the fight for independen­ce would go on.

Puigdemont, speaking at a news conference in Brussels, also said he was not seeking asylum in Belgium after Spain’s state prosecutor recommende­d charges for rebellion and sedition be brought against him. He would return to Catalonia when given “guarantees” by the Spanish government, he said.

Puigdemont’s announceme­nt that he would accept the regional election on December 21 signaled the Madrid government had for now gained the upper hand in the protracted struggle over Catalonia, a wealthy northeaste­rn region that already had considerab­le autonomy.

Resistance to Madrid’s imposition of direct control on Catalonia failed to materializ­e at the start of the week and the secessioni­st leadership is in disarray.

But a poll released on Tuesday showed that support for the creation of an independen­t state of Catalonia rose to an almost three-year high in October.

Spain’s Constituti­onal Court on Tuesday blocked the unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce made by the regional parliament on Friday – a largely symbolic move that gained no traction and led to the assembly’s dismissal by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy less than an hour after it was made.

“I ask the Catalan people to prepare for a long road. Democracy will be the foundation of our victory,” Puigdemont said in Brussels, where he showed up after dropping out of sight over the weekend.

Rajoy, who has taken an uncompromi­sing stance throughout the crisis, is gambling on anti-independen­ce parties taking power in the regional parliament and putting the brakes on the independen­ce drive. Puigdemont will hope a strong showing for the independen­ce camp will reboot the secessioni­sts after a tumultuous several weeks.

Puigdemont did not say when he would return to Spain and denied he was fleeing from justice, but he could be called to testify before the court on the rebellion and sedition charges as soon as the end of the week. He did not specify what guarantees he sought.

The Spanish government said over the weekend Puigdemont was welcome to stand in the election. The judicial process was a separate matter, it said.

The Supreme Court also began processing rebellion charges against Catalan Parliament Speaker Carme Forcadell and other senior leaders on Tuesday.

The political crisis, Spain’s gravest since the return of democracy in the late 1970s, was triggered by an independen­ce referendum held in Catalonia on October 1.

Though it was declared illegal by Spanish courts and less than half Catalonia’s eligible voters took part, the pro-secessioni­st regional government said the vote gave it a mandate for independen­ce.

The United States, Britain, Germany and France have all backed Rajoy and rejected an independen­t Catalan state, although some have called for dialogue between the opposing sides.

Puigdemont, Vice President Oriol Junqueras and other Catalan leaders had said previously they would not accept their dismissal. But their respective parties, PdeCat and Esquerra Republican­a de Catalunya, said on Monday they would take part in the election, a tacit acceptance of direct rule from Madrid.

The struggle has divided Catalonia itself and caused deep resentment across the rest of Spain, although separatist sentiment persists in the Basque Country and some other areas.

Two recent polls show support for independen­ce may have started to wane.

But an official regional survey published on Tuesday showed some 48.7% of Catalans believe the region should be independen­t, up from 41.1% in June and the highest since December 2014.

Based on 1,338 interviews, the Centre d’Estudis d’Opinio poll was the first survey released since the independen­ce declaratio­n though the bulk of it was taken before then, between October 16 and October 29.

Despite his dash to the European Union’s power center, Puigdemont’s hopes of engaging the bloc in his cause seem forlorn. Member states have asserted their support for Spanish unity, and EU institutio­ns in Brussels say they will deal only with Madrid and that the dispute remains an internal matter.

“Our position remains unchanged,” EU Commission spokeswoma­n Mina Andreeva said in Brussels on Tuesday.

But some analysts say the dispute is not going to disappear anytime soon despite the present state of play.

“Spain is heading for a period of disruption, and like the UK and Brexit, having its policy agenda dominated by one political issue while other key challenges fade into the background,” said Raj Badiani, an economist at IHS Markit in London. “A more tangible impact from the crisis could evolve from early 2018, with the uncertaint­y set to build as Catalans push harder for a legally binding referendum.”

Influentia­l Catalan business lobbies have backed direct rule and called on firms to stay in the region. The crisis has prompted more than 1,000 businesses to switch their legal headquarte­rs from Catalonia, which contribute­s about a fifth of Spain’s economy, the fourth-largest in the euro zone.

Spain’s IBEX fell slightly as Puigdemont began speaking in Brussels but then rose again.

For some in Barcelona, the overwhelmi­ng emotion appears to be exasperati­on.

“It’s a farcical and completely ridiculous situation,” said Ernesto Hernandez Busto, a 42-year-old editor. “This extreme nationalis­m, this separatism, has taken Catalonia to the most absurd situation and the worst inconvenie­nce we have had in the last 40 years.”

 ?? (Yves Herman/Reuters) ?? SACKED CATALAN leader Carles Puigdemont and former members of the Catalonia government Clara Ponsati (left) and Meritxell Borras attend a news conference yesterday in Brussels.
(Yves Herman/Reuters) SACKED CATALAN leader Carles Puigdemont and former members of the Catalonia government Clara Ponsati (left) and Meritxell Borras attend a news conference yesterday in Brussels.

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