MADRID, Dec 4: A Spanish judge on Monday ordered that four prominent members of the Catalan independence movement should remain in custody, including the no. 2 of the ousted regional government, who will campaign in a polarized regional election from a jail near Madrid.
Meanwhile, sacked Catalan president Carles Puigdemont and four close separatist allies who are also running for re-election were appearing in a Brussels court again for extradition hearings and a possible decision whether they will be sent back to Spain.
The group is refusing to return to Spain to face rebellion, sedition and embezzlement charges that can be punished with decades in prison under the country’s criminal laws.
Whatever decision is made on Monday in Brussels, two appeals will be possible and a final ruling could well only come only after the Dec. 21 election called by Spain’s central authorities, in which Puigdemont is leading his party’s campaign.
Catalan separatists' long-awaited trial begins in Madrid
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative Spanish government sacked Puigdemont’s cabinet when it took control of Catalonia shortly after separatist regional lawmakers passed a declaration of independence in late October.
The early election is an attempt to find a democratic way out of the nation’s worst institutional crisis in nearly four decades. But the vote is shaping up as a plebiscite between those for and against independence, with polls predicting a close race between the two camps.
Adding to the uncertainty, a Supreme Court judge decided on Monday to uphold the preventive jailing of ousted Catalan Vice President Oriol Junqueras, who tops the ticket for the left-republican ERC party.
ERC was part of the former Catalan ruling coalition with Puigdemont’s conservative party but is leading the polls ahead of the new election.
Campaigning officially begins at midnight on Monday.
Junqueras and the other jailed politicians pledged last week to give up on efforts to seek unilateral independence for the wealthy northeastern region, in the hope of being freed.
But judge Pablo Llarena said in his decision on Monday that it remains to be seen if Junqueras’ pledge to abide by Spanish law is “truthful and real.”
The magistrate also upheld custody orders without bail for the former regional interior minister, Joaquim Forn, and the leaders of Assemblea Nacional Catalan and Omnium Cultural, the two Catalan grassroots groups that have been the main drivers of the separatist bid in Catalonia.
Llarena set bail of 100,000 euros (US$118,000 dollars) for the six other Catalan politicians who had been jailed in early November, and ordered their passports to be confiscated.
The six were expected to leave jails near Madrid later on Monday.