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Riccardo Pareggiani

Catalonia leader summoned to Madrid to face questioning over 'rebellion'

Carles Puigdemont faces up to 30 years in prison.

SPAIN’S TOP CRIMINAL court summoned Catalonia’s axed separatist leader for questioning, hours after he appeared in Brussels insisting he remained the “legitimate president” of a region now under direct rule from Madrid.

The National Audience in Madrid, which deals with major criminal cases, summoned Carles Puigdemont and 13 other former members of his administration, dismissed by Spain’s central government last week, to appear on Thursday and Friday.

They are then set to be placed under formal investigation.

On Monday, Spain’s chief prosecutor said he was seeking charges of rebellion, punishable by up to 30 years behind bars, sedition and misuse of public funds.

But the 54-year-old Puigdemont is in Brussels, where he surfaced after reportedly driving to Marseille in France and taking a plane to the Belgian capital.

At a packed and chaotic news conference , Puigdemont said he was in Brussels “for safety purposes and freedom” and to “explain the Catalan problem in the institutional heart of Europe”.

He denied that he intended to claim asylum but said he and several other former ministers who travelled with him would return only if they have guarantees that legal proceedings would be impartial.

Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said that during Puigdemont’s time in the country he would be “treated like any other European citizen” with “the same rights and responsibilities”.

Two former ministers flew back to Barcelona late yesterday where they were greeted by a small group of demonstrators who waved Spanish flags in their faces and shouted “traitors” and “Viva Espana!” at them.

If Puigdemont fails to appear in court as requested, Spanish prosecutors could order his arrest.

His lawyer Jaume Alonso-Cuevillas complained that Puigdemont had not been “given time to prepare the defence”.

The National Audience also gave Puigdemont and his former ministers three days to pay a combined deposit against potential penalties of €6.2 million.

Uncharted territory

Puigdemont’s departure and the court’s announcement are the latest twists in the saga over semi-autonomous Catalonia’s drive for independence, which has sparked Spain’s biggest crisis in decades.

With its own language and distinct culture, Catalonia, which accounts for a fifth of Spain’s economy and 16 percent of its population, is deeply divided over independence.

On 1 October, the region held an unregulated referendum, marked by a heavy-handed operation by Spanish police, in which a large majority voted in favour of seceding from Spain.

But Spain’s top court had ruled the plebiscite illegal, and turnout was just 43% .

Puigdemont insists nonetheless the referendum gave the Catalan parliament a mandate to declare independence on Friday, a decision relayed on large screens to cheering crowds in the regional capital Barcelona.

But the reaction from Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s government was swift and emphatic.

Invoking a never-used article of the constitution, Madrid dismissed Catalonia’s leaders and imposed direct rule.

On Tuesday, Spain’s top court ordered the suspension of the Catalan parliament’s independence declaration.

Spain’s Civil Guard police force meanwhile searched the headquarters of Catalonia’s regional police in a probe centred on the independence referendum, a spokesman said.

Spain’s Supreme Court also summoned the former speaker of the Catalan parliament to be put under formal investigation.

© – AFP 2017

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