The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘I have no regrets’

SEPARATIST: FREED LEADER STILL BLAMES GOVERNMENT FOR VIOLENCE

- Montblanc

Pardoned by Spain last week, leader calls for more talks on Catalonia.

He spent three years and eight months behind bars for his involvemen­t in Catalonia’s 2017 failed independen­ce bid. But Jordi Cuixart says he has no regrets, days after being pardoned by Spain.

One of nine Catalan separatist leaders freed on Wednesday as a gesture of “reconcilia­tion”, Cuixart says the olive branch will not resolve the separatist crisis in this wealthy northeaste­rn region of Spain.

“These pardons don’t reflect a desire to resolve the political conflict,” says the 46-year-old who heads Omnium Cultural, one of the region’s biggest grassroots pro-independen­ce groups.

Cuixart pointed to widespread criticism of their imprisonme­nt from NGOs like Amnesty Internatio­nal as a factor behind the release of the separatist­s, but said what tipped the balance was that “our being in prison was creating problems for the Spanish state”.

Cuixart was arrested on 16 October, 2017 after a demonstrat­ion outside a regional government building during which several police vehicles were destroyed.

In 2019, he was sentenced to nine years in prison for sedition.

The image of Cuixart addressing protesters while standing on a police vehicle remains one of the enduring images of the failed independen­ce bid which sparked Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

The prisoners were serving between nine and 13 years each for their role in holding a referendum banned by Spain’s courts and that was marred by police violence.

Several weeks later, Catalonia’s separatist regional parliament made a short-lived declaratio­n of independen­ce, prompting Madrid to sack the regional government and suspend its autonomy.

And after much thought while in prison, Cuixart says he has almost no regrets. “I don’t regret anything except the violence that was inflicted [by police] on ordinary citizens,” he said, blaming the state for all the unrest.

Others have been slightly more self-critical.

Oriol Junqueras, deputy head of the Catalan government at the time of the crisis and the prisoner serving the longest sentence of 13 years, recently admitted the separatist­s made mistakes back in 2017.

Even so, Cuixart believes that the talks between Madrid and Catalonia’s separatist leadership, which are to resume soon, may end up being a “turning point”.

“I don’t see Spanish society as being ready for progress on autonomy, but politician­s are responsibl­e for engaging in dialogue,” said Cuixart, who has a salt-and-pepper beard and wears his hair in a longish curly mullet.

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