The Jerusalem Post

Pardoned Catalonia separatist­s leave prison

- • By LUIS FELIPE CASTILLEJA and JOAN FAUS

SANT JOAN DE VILATORRAD­A, Spain (Reuters) – Vowing to keep fighting for an independen­t Catalonia, defiant separatist leaders who were jailed over their role in a failed 2017 bid for independen­ce walked out of prison on Wednesday after Spain’s government granted them pardons.

The released politician­s and activists, who carried a banner demanding “freedom for Catalonia,” were greeted by the pro-independen­ce head of the Catalan regional government, Pere Aragones, amid cheers and clapping from supporters.

“There is no pardon that will silence the Catalan people, they will not silence us,” Jordi Cuixart, one of the pardoned separatist­s and head of Catalan cultural associatio­n Omnium, told reporters outside the Lledoners jail, an hour north of Barcelona.

Josep Rull, a former Catalan government official, said: “We will achieve Catalonia’s independen­ce and we will win.”

The nine politician­s and activists were sentenced in 2019 to between nine and 13 years for sedition and misuse of public funds, after an unauthoriz­ed referendum on a breakaway that led to a short-lived declaratio­n of independen­ce and Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

The central government pardoned them in a goodwill gesture aimed at kick-starting negotiatio­ns on solving the political conflict, though the pardons are conditiona­l and a ban on the leaders holding public office remains in place.

Madrid has ruled out allowing a legal referendum on independen­ce.

“It is not just a question that it is unconstitu­tional, it is that we can’t keep fracturing the Catalan society,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told parliament, answering calls from separatist legislator­s for another vote authorized by Madrid.

Meanwhile, conservati­ve opposition parties have renewed their calls for Sanchez to resign over the pardons, arguing that the move undermines Spain’s unity.

Opinion polls show just about half of Catalonia’s population favors splitting from Spain.

Catalan separatist­s are also seeking a broad amnesty for all those with outstandin­g legal cases related to the 2017 referendum independen­ce bid.

“Amnesty is what we want and we will achieve it,” said former Catalan parliament speaker Carme Forcadell as she walked out of a separate jail in Barcelona, calling her release a “small victory.”

The government has ruled out a blanket amnesty, which would benefit around 3,000 people including politician­s who fled Spain such as former Catalan regional government leader Carles Puigdemont.

“There won’t be amnesty, there won’t be self-rule, what there will be is dialog and politics,” said Regional Policy Minister Miquel Iceta.

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