The Daily Telegraph

Jailed Catalan politician­s suspended by parliament

- By James Badcock in Madrid

FOUR jailed Catalan politician­s have been suspended as MPS in Spain’s congress as the country’s democracy continues to suffer jolts from Catalonia’s unlawful independen­ce referendum.

Meritxell Batet, the Socialist party speaker of congress, said yesterday’s decision to suspend the Catalan politician­s was taken on legal advice because the four were in custody on accusation­s of rebellion, along with eight other pro-independen­ce leaders also standing trial at Spain’s supreme court.

But the divisive nature of the Catalan issue among Spain’s political forces led to accusation­s of skuldugger­y by Rightof-centre opposition parties, who accused the ruling Socialists of having tried to avoid suspending the four MPS until after Sunday’s European and Spanish local elections.

The lawmakers, including Oriol Junqueras, the former Catalan vice president, for whom prosecutor­s are seeking a 25-year sentence, were allowed out of prison to swear their oaths of office at Tuesday’s opening of congress. They promised to obey Spain’s constituti­on “out of a legal imperative”, while also swearing loyalty to the Catalan people and what they consider a mandate to secede from Spain.

The attitude of Mr Junqueras’s ERC Catalan party was seen as likely to influence whether Pedro Sánchez, the Spanish prime minister, could get majority backing to remain in power.

“The speaker has been making a fool of herself. She was forced to take this decision because the supreme court and her legal advisers said so,” said José Manuel Villegas, the parliament­ary spokesman for the liberal Ciudadanos party. The Socialist government “humiliate the Spanish people to keep the separatist­s happy”, Mr Villegas added.

With the MPS suspended, the ERC can decide to replace them or leave the seats empty. In the latter scenario, Mr Sánchez’s ability to command a majority with Left-wing Podemos could become a little easier.

Mr Junqueras is standing in Sunday’s European Parliament election, alongside Carles Puigdemont, the former Catalonian president, who is in selfimpose­d exile. If elected, Mr Puigdemont would need to return to Spain to sign the paperwork, where he would almost certainly be arrested.

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