Catalan separatist leaders given lengthy prison sentences
Nine Catalan separatist leaders have been cleared of
violent rebellion over their roles in the failed bid for regional independence
two years ago but found guilty of the lesser crimes of sedition and misuse of
public funds.
The region’s former vice-president Oriol Junqueras
was convicted of sedition and misuse of public funds by Spain’s supreme court,
and sentenced to 13 years in prison. He was also banned from holding public
office for 13 years.
The former Catalan foreign minister Raül Romeva was
convicted of the same offence and sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment and
handed a 12-year ban on holding office, as were the former regional government
spokesman Jordi Turull and the former labour minister Dolors Bassa.
Carme Forcadell, the former speaker of the Catalan
parliament, was sentenced to 11 and a half years in prison, while the former
Catalan interior minister Joaquim Forn and former territorial minister Josep
Rull got 10 and a half years each.
Two influential pro-independence grassroots
activists, Jordi Cuixart and Jordi Sànchez, were found guilty of sedition and
given nine-year sentences.
Three other independence leaders were found guilty
of disobedience and handed fines and bans on holding office.
Monday’s verdict, delivered by seven judges at
Spain’s supreme court, came at the end of a landmark, four-month trial that
heard from 422 witnesses and investigated the events that triggered the
country’s worst political crisis since it returned to democracy following the
death of General Franco.
Junqueras responded to the sentence with a tweet
urging people not to give up on Catalan independence. “We’ll return stronger
and with even more belief than ever,” he wrote. “Thanks to everyone, keep
fighting because we will keep fighting forever.”
Jordi Sànchez, a regional MP and former president of
the influential grassroots Catalan National Assembly, said his nine-year prison
sentence would not dent his optimism nor his belief in an independent
Catalonia.
He also issued an implicit plea for calm. “Let’s
express ourselves without fear and move forward, non-violently, towards
freedom,” he tweeted.
Spain’s acting prime minister, the socialist leader
Pedro Sánchez, said his government respected the supreme court’s decision,
which, he added, had met all the requirements of due process, transparency and
separation of powers.
“Nobody is above the law,” he said. “In a democracy
like Spain, nobody is subject to trial for his or her ideas or politics but
rather for criminal conduct as provided by the law.”
Sánchez said the Catalan pro-independence movement
had tried to subvert the Spanish constitution and had created a fracture within
Catalan society “by refusing to recognise the majority who oppose
independence”.
He also said the government would work to guarantee
public order in the coming days.
While the Catalan president, Quim Torra, urged an
amnesty for those convicted, he insisted the sentences would not deflect his
administration from pressing on with its quest for independence.
“Repression will never triumph over dialogue,
democracy and self-determination,” he said. “Catalan society will respond to
this ignominy in the same way it has always expressed itself: with
determination, calm, firmness and public spiritedness – in the democratic and
peaceful way we are known for.”
Police have been deployed to Catalonia’s biggest
travel hubs, with a large number of officers patrolling Barcelona airport and
the city’s Sants railway station to guard against any attempts at direct action
in response to the sentences. Police were also gathering at Girona’s main
railway station.
A demonstration was under way along one of
Barcelona’s main thoroughfares, the Via Laietana, with protesters holding
banners demanding the prisoners’ release. A small crowd also gathered at Plaça
San Jaume, the seat of the Catalan government in Barcelona.
The Catalan association of local authorities,
jointly with the association of local authorities for independence, have called
on their members to suspend all activities for 72 hours.
Protesters holding banners reading ‘Take the street’
and ‘Free political prisoners’ in Barcelona after the nine Catalan leaders were
sentenced.
Nine of the 12 defendants had stood accused of
rebellion, which carries a prison sentence of up to 25 years.
The case centred on the referendum on 1 October
2017, which was held in defiance of the then government of the conservative
prime minister Mariano Rajoy, and of the country’s constitution, which is
founded on the “indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation”.
Also scrutinised were the events of 20 September
2017, when police raided Catalan regional government offices and arrested 14
senior officials in an attempt to head off the vote.
The raids brought thousands of Catalans out to
protest. Guardia Civil officers found themselves trapped inside the buildings
they were searching and three of their vehicles were vandalised.
The state prosecutor, Javier Zaragoza, had argued
such behaviour constituted “physical, compulsive and intimidatory violence”,
adding: “The violent nature of an uprising does not mean there has to be either
serious or armed violence.”
However, defence lawyers rejected such arguments,
pointing out that under Spanish law, rebellion involves “revolting violently
and publicly”.
The lesser offence of sedition, meanwhile, is
defined as “rising up publicly and tumultuously to prevent, through force or
beyond legal means, the application of the law”. It carries a maximum prison
sentence of 15 years.
The offence of disobedience carries a fine and a ban
from holding public office, but not a jail term.
Rajoy reacted to the unilateral independence
declaration by using the constitution to sack the secessionist Catalan
government and assume control of the region.
The defendants have already said they will appeal to
the European court of human rights if necessary.
A spokeswoman for the European commission said it
had no comment to make on the decisions of national courts, but added the
commission respected the decisions of the Spanish judiciary.
“Our position on this is well known and has not
changed,” she said. “This is, and remains, an internal matter for Spain, which
has to be dealt with in line with its constitutional order.”