BARCELONA, Sept 25 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Catalonia’s regional leader called for the “immediate release” of his exiled predecessor Carles Puigdemont, who was arrested in Italy the day before on charges linked to a failed Catalan independence bid.
“We demand the immediate release of Carles Puigdemont,” Pere Aragones told a news conference in Barcelona, saying he would travel to Sardinia to “stand by” the former leader who led a Catalan bid to break away from Spain in
October 2017.
Meanwhile, a judge in Sardinia has ordered Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont released from jail ahead of an Italian court decision on Spain’s extradition request.
“All good,” Puigdemont told reporters after leaving the prison on Friday.
The judge ruled that Puigdemont is even free to travel ahead of an Oct 4 extradition hearing.
Puigdemont’s Italian lawyer Agostinoangelo Marras told reporters outside the courthouse in Sassari, Sardinia, that when the judge asked Puigdemont if he wanted to be returned to Spain, his client replied “no.”
Marras said a three-judge panel would take up the extradition request and decide “in a very short time.”
Meanwhile, according to the judge’s decision, Puigdemont must remain in Sardinia pending the outcome of the extradition request.
Puigdemont was taken into custody on Thursday night when he arrived at an airport in Alghero, Sardinia.
He had been invited to attend a Catalan cultural event as well as a meeting, a few days later, of Sardinian independence sympathisers on the Mediterranean island.
The 58-year-old is wanted by Madrid on charges of sedition over his attempts to lead a Catalan breakaway from Spain in October 2017.
While serving as the region’s president in 2016-2017, Puigdemont pushed for secession from Spain.
He currently holds a seat in the European Union’s parliament, although that legislature stripped him of parliamentary immunity.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said during an official visit to the Canary Islands on Friday that he has “respect for all legal procedures opened in Spain, in Europe and, in this case, in Italy.”
Sanchez, who recently opened direct talks with Catalan regional leaders, said that “dialogue is the only way to bring together Catalans who have distinct opinions and to bring together Catalans with the rest of Spain.”
Just under half of Catalans want to break away from Spain, opinion polls indicate. Most Spaniards don’t want Catalonia to be granted independence. — NNN-AGENCIES