CATALONIA CRISIS: PUIGDEMONT'S DENMARK VISIT & PARLIAMENT PROPOSES HIM AS LEADER DRAWS ANGER FROM SPAIN
Catalonia's former leader
Carles Puigdemont has travelled to Denmark, triggering a failed attempt by
Spain's prosecutor to have him arrested.
The Catalan parliament on Monday proposed Carles Puigdemont as
candidate for president, dealing a blow to central government efforts to derail
an independence movement that has plunged Spain into political crisis.
As the legislature’s
speaker named Puigdemont as the sole candidate for a position he was fired from
in October, Spain’s legal system sought to tighten its net around him.
The state prosecutor
in Madrid requested the reactivation of a European arrest warrant to detain him
on charges of sedition and rebellion in Copenhagen, where Puigdemont touched
down earlier on Monday on his first trip away from Belgium in three months of
self-imposed exile.
He fled to Brussels
in October after Spain’s central government sacked him for spearheading an
independence drive that culminated in an illegal referendum and a unilateral
declaration of independence by the Catalan parliament.
He became the top
candidate to lead the region again after regional elections last month, called
by Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, that gave secessionists a majority.
“I confirm that the
only candidate that has been proposed is Mr. Carles Puigdemont,” said Roger
Torrent, the newly-elected separatist speaker at the Catalan parliament.
“I am conscious of
the warnings that weigh upon him, but I am also conscious of his absolute
legitimacy to be candidate,” said Torrent, calling for dialogue with Madrid to
resolve the situation.
Puigdemont argues he
could govern the region from exile abroad, an option that Rajoy has ruled out.
A Reuters reporter
saw Puigdemont come through customs at Copenhagen airport a little after 0700
GMT and, without being detained, get in a car and leave.
It was not clear
where Puigdemont was headed. He is billed to appear at the University of
Copenhagen at 2:00 p.m. CET (1:00 p.m. GMT) for a debate on the political
situation in Catalonia.
According the Danish
parliament’s diary, he has also been invited to a meeting there on Tuesday by
Magni Arge, a deputy representing the Faroe Islands, which have their own
independence movement seeking secession from Denmark.
Shortly after
Puigdemont’s arrival in Copenhagen, Spain’s state prosecution service said it
had asked the Supreme Court to reactivate the warrant, on charges of sedition
and rebellion, originally issued against him - and later lifted - after he fled
to Belgium.
The Danish state
prosecutor declined to comment.
After weeks of
uneasy calm, the political crisis triggered by Catalonia’s independence drive
flared up again last week when the new regional parliament elected Torrent as
speaker at its first sitting.
Despite that
tension, Spain’s borrowing costs fell to six-week lows on Monday after credit
agency Fitch upgraded its sovereign rating to gave Spain its first “A-” grade
since the euro zone debt crisis.
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