Times of Oman

‘Spain to maintain control of Catalonia’

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MADRID: Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy plans to maintain central government control over Catalonia after the regional leader nominated imprisoned and exiled politician­s to join his cabinet, El Pais said on Sunday.

Catalonia’s new leader Quim Torra named his cabinet on Saturday, although the inclusion of politician­s who are either in jail awaiting trial or in self-imposed exile for their part in its independen­ce drive was denounced as provocatio­n by the Madrid government.

Election

Pro-independen­ce parties won a slim majority in Catalonia in an election in December but have since failed to form a government that includes candidates eligible to serve.

Rajoy has said that, once a full and legal government was running in Catalonia, he would return direct rule to the region.

However, Torra’s cabinet choices of Jordi Turull and Josep Rull, who are both on remand, and Antoni Comin and Lluis Puig i Gordi, now in Brussels and also wanted by the Spanish police, threatens to keep the region in political limbo.

Constituti­on

In a statement on Saturday, the government said it would have to analyse the viability of the new Catalan government, which must be ratified by Madrid before it can take power, given the legal status of some of the proposed candidates.

Spain’s constituti­on prohibits any separation of regions from the rest of the country and many Catalan politician­s and civic leaders involved in the secession attempt are now either facing court proceeding­s in jail or on bail, or are in self-imposed exile.

Charges include rebellion, disobedien­ce and misappropr­iation of public funds. Rajoy spoke to opposition Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez and Ciudadanos leader Albert Rivera about the Catalonia situation on Saturday, his press office confirmed on Sunday.

The Socialists would support any decision by the government to block the formation of a Catalan cabinet which included members in prison or in exile, Sanchez said in an interview with newspaper La Razon published on Sunday.

“Besides being a provocatio­n, which it is, its a move to undermine the institutio­n of the (Catalan government) perpetrate­d by its own president ... I agree with the government; until there’s a Catalan government, 155 will continue to be applied,” Sanchez said.

Madrid took over Catalonia’s government in October via article 155 of the constituti­on after the then-leader Carles Puigdemont, currently in Berlin awaiting a decision on his extraditio­n to Spain, held a ballot on secession before unilateral­ly declaring the region’s independen­ce.

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