Spanish prosecutors request jail for Catalan parliament speaker

Spain’s state prosecutor on Thursday asked a judge to jail the Catalan parliament speaker who enabled its declaration of independence while an investigation into charges of rebellion and sedition continues. 

Prosecutors also requested jail for three Catalan lawmakers summoned to the Supreme Court and the release of two others on certain conditions, the newspaper reported, citing unspecified sources.

A spokeswoman for the court declined to comment.

If the judge upholds the request, the speaker, Carme Forcadell, would join eight former members of the Catalan government and the leaders of the two main pro-independence grassroots groups who are in custody awaiting trial for their leading roles in the independence drive.

On Thursday, High Court Judge Carmen Lamela rejected an appeal presented by their lawyers for their release, a court spokeswoman said.

Forcadell had earlier told the Supreme Court that the Oct. 27 independence declaration was not legally binding, according to court sources, in a comment that could undermine the region’s secessionist push.

The Catalan independence push has deeply divided Spain, dragging it into its worst political crisis since the return of democracy four decades ago and fuelling anti-Spanish sentiment in Catalonia and nationalist tendencies elsewhere.

But the struggle has also divided Catalonia itself, and cracks have begun appearing within the pro-independence movement.

On Tuesday, deposed Catalan president Carles Puigdemont’s PDeCAT party failed to agree on a united ticket to contest the election with another secessionist party, making it difficult for the pro-independence camp to govern the region after the vote and press ahead with its bid to split from Spain.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called the election following the independence declaration, which also prompted him to dissolve the Catalan parliament and fire Puigdemont’s administration.

Carme Forcadell, Speaker of the Catalan parliament, arrives to Spain’s Supreme Court to testify on charges of rebellion, sedition and misuse of public funds for defying the central government by holding an independence referendum and proclaiming independence, in Madrid, Spain, November 9, 2017. REUTERS/Javier Barbancho

Forcadell at the time described Rajoy’s actions as a “coup” and an “attack against democracy”.

The Supreme Court, which handles cases against defendants with parliamentary immunity, will decide whether to remand Forcadell and the other five legislators in custody pending the investigation, or release them under certain conditions.

The same court decided on Thursday to take over two other cases against Forcadell and the lawmakers currently overseen by the Catalan High Court, suggesting judges were looking to centralize all legal proceedings involving the independence vote in one court.

The Supreme Court has legal grounds to also take over the Spanish High Court case involving the government members, although so far it has not made any statements on its intentions.

The Spanish High Court has issued an arrest warrant on sedition and rebellion charges for Puigdemont, who went into self-imposed exile in Belgium last week, and against four former members of his cabinet who are with him in Brussels.

“Puigdemont has fled, but Puigdemont will come back and answer to Spanish justice. I have no doubt (about this) at all,” Spain’s Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido told Spanish television on Thursday.

The deposed leader appealed without success for EU intervention over the crisis.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, speaking from the Spanish city of Salamanca on Thursday at an event also attended by Rajoy, called on Europe to reject all forms of separatism.

“Nationalisms are a poison that prevent Europe from working together,” he said.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through [email protected]
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