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Fugitive ex-Catalan leader plans return to Spain despite threat of arrest over failed secession bid
Read full article: Fugitive ex-Catalan leader plans return to Spain despite threat of arrest over failed secession bidFormer Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont says he plans to return to his country on Thursday despite the likelihood of being arrested on his return.
Spain's parliament gives final approval to amnesty law for Catalonia's separatists
Read full article: Spain's parliament gives final approval to amnesty law for Catalonia's separatistsSpain’s lower house of parliament has given final approval to a contentious amnesty law for hundreds of Catalan separatists involved in the illegal and unsuccessful 2017 secession bid.
Socialists deal blow to separatists in Catalan elections but face uphill task to form government
Read full article: Socialists deal blow to separatists in Catalan elections but face uphill task to form governmentSpain’s ruling Socialist party scored a crucial victory in regional elections in the powerful northeastern region of Catalonia, garnering the most seats and dealing a blow to the region’s two main separatist parties that have governed for decades.
Catalan separatists lose majority as Spain's pro-union Socialists win regional elections
Read full article: Catalan separatists lose majority as Spain's pro-union Socialists win regional electionsSeparatist parties are in danger of losing their decade-long hold of power in Spain's northeastern region of Catalonia.
How far has Spain moved past Catalonia's secession crisis? Voters will decide in regional election
Read full article: How far has Spain moved past Catalonia's secession crisis? Voters will decide in regional electionAbout 6 million Catalans are called to cast ballots in regional elections on Sunday that will surely have reverberations in Spain's national politics.
Spain approves amnesty for Catalan separatists, but adiós to hopes it would bolster weak government
Read full article: Spain approves amnesty for Catalan separatists, but adiós to hopes it would bolster weak governmentSpanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has kept his part of a bargain struck last year with Catalonia’s separatists to keep him in power by pushing through a divisive amnesty bill.
Catalonia calls an early regional election that could add to Spain’s political uncertainty
Read full article: Catalonia calls an early regional election that could add to Spain’s political uncertaintyThe regional president of Catalonia has called an early election for May 12 after his minority government failed to pass a budget for Spain’s wealthy northeast region that includes Barcelona.
Catalan separatists reject amnesty bill, highlighting the fragility of Spain's minority government
Read full article: Catalan separatists reject amnesty bill, highlighting the fragility of Spain's minority governmentCatalan separatist lawmakers have dealt Spain’s government a blow by voting against a hugely divisive amnesty law that was aimed at helping hundreds of their supporters involved in Catalonia’s unsuccessful 2017 independence bid.
Pedro Sánchez reelected Spain's prime minister despite controversy over amnesty for separatists
Read full article: Pedro Sánchez reelected Spain's prime minister despite controversy over amnesty for separatistsSpain’s acting Socialist prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has won a parliamentary vote to form a new leftist coalition government.
Spain's leader defends amnesty deal for Catalan separatists ahead of vote on new government
Read full article: Spain's leader defends amnesty deal for Catalan separatists ahead of vote on new governmentSpain’s acting Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has defended his controversial amnesty deal for Catalonia’s separatists in parliament.
Why Spain's acting leader is offering a politically explosive amnesty for Catalan separatists
Read full article: Why Spain's acting leader is offering a politically explosive amnesty for Catalan separatistsSpain's acting Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s chances of forming a new coalition minority government following an inconclusive election in July have been greatly boosted by a deal with a tiny party he surely hoped he would never have to rely on.
Spain's Socialists will grant amnesty to Catalan separatists in return for support of new government
Read full article: Spain's Socialists will grant amnesty to Catalan separatists in return for support of new governmentSpain’s Socialist Party has struck a deal with a fringe Catalan separatist party to grant an amnesty for potentially thousands of people involved in the region’s failed secession bid in exchange for its key backing of acting Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez to form a new government.
Spain’s leader mulls granting amnesty to thousands of Catalan separatists in order to stay in power
Read full article: Spain’s leader mulls granting amnesty to thousands of Catalan separatists in order to stay in powerThousands of ordinary citizens got into legal trouble for their parts in Catalonia’s illegal independence bid that brought Spain to the brink of rupture six years ago.
Socialist wins key Spanish parliament vote that could pave way for new center-left government
Read full article: Socialist wins key Spanish parliament vote that could pave way for new center-left governmentSpain’s newly elected Parliament has voted by a majority to elect a Socialist candidate as chamber speaker, breathing some life into acting Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez´s aspirations to form another leftist government.
Count of ballots from Spaniards abroad gives edge to right-wing block and deepens the stalemate
Read full article: Count of ballots from Spaniards abroad gives edge to right-wing block and deepens the stalemateBallots from Spaniards living abroad gave a new twist to the inconclusive results from the general election.
A fugitive Catalan separatist may hold the key to Spain's government after an inconclusive election
Read full article: A fugitive Catalan separatist may hold the key to Spain's government after an inconclusive electionNearly six years ago, the leader of Catalonia’s failed secession bid slipped secretly across the Spanish border to escape arrest and start a life as a self-styled political exile.
Who benefits? Spain, Catalan separatists dispute EU ruling
Read full article: Who benefits? Spain, Catalan separatists dispute EU rulingThe European Union's top court has issued a ruling that allows Spain to make another attempt to seek the extradition of a former Catalan separatist politician living in Brussels.
Spain drops sedition charge against former Catalan leader
Read full article: Spain drops sedition charge against former Catalan leaderA Spanish judge has dropped sedition charges against former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont for his role in the region’s illegal secession push in 2017 that brought Spain’s most serious political crisis for decades.
Spain appeases Catalans with planned reform of sedition law
Read full article: Spain appeases Catalans with planned reform of sedition lawSpain's coalition government has presented a proposal in Parliament to reform the centuries-old crime of sedition for one of public disorder which would carry lower sentences.
Spain: Hacked Catalans to launch a legal bid on spyware use
Read full article: Spain: Hacked Catalans to launch a legal bid on spyware useCatalan separatist politicians and activists are launching a legal offensive in half a dozen countries against the Spanish state and the Israeli companies behind the controversial spyware allegedly used to snoop on them.
Catalan separatist leader out of Sardinia jail, can travel
Read full article: Catalan separatist leader out of Sardinia jail, can travelCatalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont has been released from a jail in Sardinia after a judge ruled that he could go free ahead of an Oct. 4 extradition hearing.
Dialogue with Spain deepens division between Catalan parties
Read full article: Dialogue with Spain deepens division between Catalan partiesThe leader of Catalonia in northeastern Spain has announced that it’s excluding a separatist party in his ruling regional coalition from talks with the central government aimed at solving the tensions over the growing pro-independence sentiment.
Catalan separatist returns from Belgium to face Spanish law
Read full article: Catalan separatist returns from Belgium to face Spanish lawFormer Catalan government member Meritxell Serret handed herself into Spain's Supreme Court on Thursday March 11, 2021, three years after she fled to Belgium. (AP Photo/Olivier Matthys, File)BARCELONA – Former Catalan government member Meritxell Serret handed herself into Spain’s Supreme Court on Thursday, three years after she fled to Belgium along with other associates who led Catalonia’s failed secession attempt. When Puigdemont fled Spain in October 2017 he was accompanied by Serret and six other members of the Catalan regional government, which was disbanded by Spain’s central authorities when their independence bid collapsed. She said that she intended to take the seat in the Catalan regional legislature she won in an election earlier this year. Puigdemont refused to return to Spain on claims that he could not get a fair trial.
EU lawmakers lift the immunity of 3 Catalan separatists
Read full article: EU lawmakers lift the immunity of 3 Catalan separatistsMember of European Parliament Carles Puigdemont prepares for an interview at the European Parliament in Brussels, Tuesday, March 9, 2021. In the decision on Puigdemont, 400 legislators voted for the waiver of immunity, 248 were against and 45 abstained. The measures to lift the immunity of his associates — former Catalan Health Minister Toni Comín and former regional Education Minister Clara Ponsatí — were by largely similar margins. Ad“We have lost our immunity, but the European Parliament has lost more than that. In 2019, Puigdemont and his two associates won seats in the European Parliament and were afforded protection as members of the EU assembly.
EU lawmakers to vote on fate of former Catalan president
Read full article: EU lawmakers to vote on fate of former Catalan presidentFILE - In this Monday Jan. 13, 2020 file photo, Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont reacts during a press conference at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. On Monday March 8, 2021, Puigdemont, along with cohorts Toni Comn and Clara Ponsat, face a vote by the European Parliament to lift their immunity as lawmakers as has been recommended by the parliaments Legal Affairs Committee. In 2019, he, former Catalan health minister Toni Comin and former regional education minister Clara Ponsati won seats in the European Parliament and were afforded protection in their positions as members of the EU assembly. The process is common — around 60 such demands to lift the immunity of various lawmakers were made during the 2014-2019 parliamentary term. AdThe independence vote in favor of Catalonia breaking away won by a landslide in 2017.
Ex-Catalan leader vows to keep fighting extradition to Spain
Read full article: Ex-Catalan leader vows to keep fighting extradition to SpainFILE - In this Monday Jan. 13, 2020 file photo, Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont reacts during a press conference at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias, File)BARCELONA – Catalonia’s former regional President Carles Puigdemont has vowed to keep fighting extradition back to Spain if the European Union’s parliament strips him of his immunity as a lawmaker this week. Puigdemont and two fellow Catalan separatists won seats in the European Parliament in 2019, two years after fleeing Spain because they had led a failed secession attempt for Catalonia, which Spain considered illegal. After issuing a declaration of independence that did not have any practical effect, Puigdemont fled Spain for Brussels before prosecutors could issue an arrest warrant. Ad“In Spain, the courts are not free of political interests,” he said.
AP Interview: Salvador Illa, Catalonia's quiet gamechanger
Read full article: AP Interview: Salvador Illa, Catalonia's quiet gamechangerCatalan Socialist Party (PSC) candidate in the upcoming Catalan elections Salvador Illa, reads notes ahead of an interview at his party headquarter in Barcelona, Spain, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. A former health minister of Spain hopes to become a quiet political disruptor in the country's Catalonia region when voters go to the polls next weekend. “The solution of Illa is amnesia,” said Pere Aragonès, the acting regional president of Catalonia and the leading candidate from the pro-secession Republican Left of Catalonia party. “That is not true, because we have seen how different countries have had to work together during the pandemic,” Illa said. In Germany, Health Minister Jens Spahn has fared well thanks to the country’s comparatively successful initial effort to curb infections.
Facing terror charges, ETA's last boss apologizes for deaths
Read full article: Facing terror charges, ETA's last boss apologizes for deathsJosu Urrutikoetxea, a former leader of Basque separatist militant group ETA, speaks in Paris, Thursday, Oct. 15, 2020. Survivors of violent attacks and relatives of ETA’s victims say the campaign humiliates them. ETA’s cause was politically and socially divisive inside Spain’s Basque society and widely rejected across the rest of Spain. Once the French trials end, France has agreed to extradite Urrutikoetxea to Spain, although his defense has appealed. What I do want is to see him taking the stand in court,” she said, standing at the site of ETA's attack on the Civil Guard.
Catalan independence leaders get long prison terms from Spanish court
Read full article: Catalan independence leaders get long prison terms from Spanish courtNine Catalan independence leaders have received lengthy prison sentences of between nine and 13 years for their part in a failed 2017 attempt to split from Spain, but were acquitted of the most serious charge against them. Three other defendants were found guilty of disobedience, fined and banned from public office for 20 months. He was handed 13 years in prison and banned from holding public office for 13 years after being found guilty of sedition and misuse of public funds. Prime Minister Sanchez told reporters that the Spanish government had "absolute respect for and adherence to" the Supreme Court's ruling. Three others -- Santiago Vila, Meritxell Borras and Carles Mundo -- were found guilty of disobedience, fined and banned from public office for 20 months.