The Borneo Post

Catalonia’s exleader seeking legal advice in Belgium

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BRUSSELS: Carles Puigdemont, who was removed from office as Catalonia’s president last week by Madrid’s central government, spoke with a lawyer in Belgium as Spanish prosecutor­s sought rebellion charges against the region’s separatist leaders.

But Paul Bekaert, who specialise­s in asylum issues, said “Puigdemont is not in Belgium to request asylum”, only to prepare a legal riposte to any eventual moves by Madrid.

“On this matter (asylum) nothing has yet been decided,” he told Flemish television VRT.

“I spoke with him personally in Belgium, and he officially made me his lawyer.

“I have more than 30 years of experience with the extraditio­n and political asylum for Spanish Basques, and it’s probably because of this experience that he came to me.”

Spanish media outlets reported that Puigdemont was travelling with several members of his axed government.

Bekaert was one of the lawyers for Luis Maria Zengotitab­engoa, a suspected member of the armed Basque separatist group ETA, whose extraditio­n from Belgium to Spain was authorised in 2010.

Spain’s chief prosecutor Jose Manuel Maza said he was seeking charges including rebellion – punishable by up to 30 years in prison – and sedition against the Catalan leaders who were sacked by Madrid on Friday.

Maza said they had “caused an institutio­nal crisis that led to the unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce carried out on Oct 27 with total contempt for our constituti­on.”

A court now has to decide whether to bring charges.

But several experts said it seemed unlikely that Puigdemont would be able to secure the status of political refugee in Belgium.

“It’s quite exceptiona­l to obtain asylum for a citizen of a European Union country,” Dirk Van Den Bulck of Belgium’s CGRA refugee

I have more than 30 years of experience with the extraditio­n and political asylum for Spanish Basques, and it’s probably because of this experience that he came to me. Paul Bekaert, lawyer

agency told RTBF television.

He would have to prove a “threat of persecutio­n” in his country of origin and an impossibil­ity of being protected there, Van Den Bulck said, which would be a direct contradict­ion of “the respect of fundamenta­l rights” required of all EU members.

Belgium’s immigratio­n minister, a member of the Flemish separatist N-VA party, suggested Saturday that Puigdemont could receive asylum.

But Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel later poured cold water on the idea, and an N-VA spokespers­on told AFP the party had not invited Puigdemont to Brussels.

Puigdemont maintains that the result of the banned independen­ce referendum on Oct 1 gave the region’s parliament a mandate to declare Friday that it was breaking away from Spain.

Following this declaratio­n, Madrid sacked Catalan’s leaders and took control of the semiautono­mous region under a previously unused ‘nuclear option’ in the constituti­on.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called snap elections for Dec 21 to replace the Catalan parliament in a bid to stop the secessioni­st drive.

The European Union has largely spurned the independen­ce declaratio­n, and several EU institutio­ns told AFP that no meetings are planned with Puigdemont in Brussels. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Protesters wave Spanish and Catalan Senyera flag while holding a sign reading ‘38 per cent is not Catalonia’ in reference to a referendum voter turnout during a pro-unity demonstrat­ion in Barcelona. — AFP photo
Protesters wave Spanish and Catalan Senyera flag while holding a sign reading ‘38 per cent is not Catalonia’ in reference to a referendum voter turnout during a pro-unity demonstrat­ion in Barcelona. — AFP photo

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