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Catalan separatist leader detained in Sardinia, his office says – Metro US

Catalan separatist leader detained in Sardinia, his office says

FILE PHOTO: Catalan MEPs hold joint news conference regarding their
FILE PHOTO: Catalan MEPs hold joint news conference regarding their immunity at the European Parliament, in Brussels

By Jesús Aguado and Joan Faus

MADRID (Reuters) -Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont was detained on Thursday by Italian police in Sardinia, his office said in a statement.

Spain has accused Puigdemont, the former Catalan regional head, with sedition, claiming he helped organise a 2017 independence referendum deemed illegal by Spanish courts.

In March, the European Parliament stripped Puigdemont of the immunity he enjoyed as a member since 2019. Puigdemont was living in self-imposed exile in Belgium.

His office said Puigdemont had travelled to Alghero on Thursday afternoon from Brussels to attend the Adifolk International Exhibition and to meet with the regional head of Sardinia and its ombudsman.

“When he arrived at the Alghero airport, he was stopped by the Italian border police. Tomorrow he will be placed at the disposal of the judges of the court of appeal of Sassari, which is competent to decide whether to release him or extradite him,” Puigdemont’s office said in the statement.

His lawyer Gonzalo Boye confirmed the detention in a tweet, adding that it was made on the basis of a European arrest warrant from Oct. 14, 2019, which, by “legal imperative – as stated by the European Court of Justice, is suspended.”

Puigdemont was subject to a European arrest warrant issued by Spain which is seeking his extradition over his role in the independence bid.

The referendum brought on Spain’s biggest political crisis in decades and was followed by a unilateral declaration of independence by the Catalan parliament in October 2017, which prompted the central government to impose direct rule from Madrid and authorities to arrest separatist leaders.

(Reporting by Jesús Aguado in Madrid and Joan Faus in BarcelonaEditing by David Gregorio and Matthew Lewis)