19th April 2024
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Seven of nine Catalan activists arrested to appear in court in Madrid

Of the nine Catalan pro-independence activists arrested by the Guardia Civil police on Monday, seven will appear at Spain’s National Court in Madrid on Thursday to answer charges of terrorism, rebellion and possession of explosives.

Two of the nine members of the Committees in Defence of the Republic (CDRs) pressure group were released on bail the same day of their arrest, whilst the remaining seven were held in custody and transferred to the Madrid region.

The arrests in a series of raids involving 500 police officers in a number of Catalan towns near Barcelona has caused consternation in the pro-independence movement, which has always explicitly rejected violence as a means to achieve its goals.

On Tuesday, Catalan president Quim Torra sent a letter to acting Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez asking for ‘explanations’ of statements made by the acting government’s representative in Catalonia, Teresa Cunillera, who referred to the arrests as ‘preventive detentions’.

In his letter, Torra expressed his ‘indignation’, along with that of his government and ‘a significant part of the Catalan public’, over the police operation that he said ‘passed over the principles of the presumption of innocence’ for ‘political ends’.

ALSO READ: Strong reactions from politicians following arrest of nine activists

Spanish government sources responded by insisting that the judiciary will deal with the case ‘independently and without interference’, and referred Torra to the interior ministry’s statement that the separation of powers is one of the ‘basic principles of the rule of law’.

Guardia Civil
Nine pro-independence activists were arrested on the morning of 23 September 2019. (Normal Vidal / ACN)

That was a message reiterated on Tuesday by Eva Granados, parliamentary spokeswoman for the Catalan wing of the ruling Socialist (PSOE) party, who told Torra that the acting Spanish government ‘has nothing to do’ with the judicial investigation.

Meanwhile, Lorena Roldán, the leader of the Ciudadanos (Cs) party in Catalonia, criticised Torra for his public statements ‘justifying the violent suspects’ and added that a president ‘must always condemn violence’.

However, addressing the Catalan parliament on Wednesday, Torra insisted that the operation was political in nature, and he repeated his previous claims that the ultimate aim is to create a false narrative of violence in Catalonia.

ALSO READ: 8 Spanish police officials to be investigated for referendum crackdown

Torra, who heads a government of the two main pro-independence parties, also said his executive’s goal continues to be achieving independence through democratic means, and he described linking the independence movement with terrorism as ‘intolerable’.

Yet, Torra was not the only one disturbed by the arrests. Ignacio González Vega, the spokesman for Judges for Democracy organisation, on Tuesday questioned the public prosecutor’s ‘bluntness’, which he described as inappropriate for an initial phase of an investigation.

Talking on a Spanish television channel, Vega expressed ‘surprise’ over the quantity of information released to the public in what is a secret investigation, and he insisted that the most important thing was the presumption of innocence of the ‘suspects’.

ALSO READ: Catalan Trial Day 52: defence summaries and defendants’ statements

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