Above Photo: Pro-independence supporters gather near the Spanish government office in Barcelona, Spain, Sunday, March 25, 2018. Grassroots groups both for and against Catalan secession called for protests Sunday in Barcelona after Carles Puigdemont, the fugitive ex-leader of Catalonia and ardent separatist, was arrested Sunday by German police on an international warrant.
Carles Puigdemont, the fugitive ex-leader of Catalonia was arrested Sunday by German police as he tried to enter Germany from Denmark. Puigdemont won an election, won a referendum,won a second election forced on Catalonia by the Spanish. Spain was unhappy with the results and he went into exile.
Catalan separatists have also gathered in the town of Vic tonight in protest at the Supreme Court decision to jail more leaders on remand. They sang Els Segadors.
Via @Natiadell pic.twitter.com/DQ7rl7hV3b— The Spain Report (@thespainreport) March 23, 2018
In addition, Spain’s Supreme Court ruled 25 Catalan leaders should be tried for rebellion, embezzlement or disobeying the state. Convictions could result in up to 30 years in prison. In Madrid, a Supreme Court judge ordered five more Catalan leaders to be detained without bail, pending trial over their involvement in October’s banned independence referendum.One of those taken into custody was Jordi Turull who was to be the subject of a vote in the Catalan parliament on Saturday for regional president. Other separatist figures were already in custody or had gone into exile abroad. Five Catalan politicians remanded in custody on Friday taken from court to prison when the court determined they were a flight risk.
This mass led to mass protests and police violence. The tweets below show some of what occurred
UPDATE: Crowds are clashing with police in downtown Barcelona as angry Catalans protest the detention of fugitive former leader Carles Puigdemont in Germany.
Police dressed in riot gear are striking demonstrators with batons as they try to push back a large crowd that wants to advance on the office of the Spanish government’s representative in Catalonia.
Catalan police have blocked the street and issued a call for people not to gather.
Thousands answered the call by a pro-independence grass-roots group to protest in the city center hours after Puigdemont was detained by German police.
BARCELONA, Spain—Carles Puigdemont, the fugitive ex-leader of Catalonia and an ardent separatist, was arrested Sunday by German police on an international warrant as he tried to enter the country from Denmark.
Puigdemont was on his way back to Belgium where he has been staying since fleeing Spain following a failed bid by his regional government in October to declare independence from Spain, said his lawyer, Jaume Alonso-Cuevillas.
The Spanish government told The Associated Press it had received “official confirmation from German authorities of the arrest” of Puigdemont in response to the warrant issued by Spain’s Supreme Court.
Spanish state prosecutor said it was in contact with its German counterparts to carry out its request to extradite Puigdemont to Spain, where he faces charges including rebellion that could put him in prison for up to 30 years.
German highway police arrested Puigdemont on Sunday morning near the A7 highway that leads into Germany, police in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein said. State prosecutors in the northern town of Schleswig are now in charge, but they couldn’t be immediately reached for further details.
German news agency dpa said that Puigdemont was taken to a prison in the northern town of Neumuenster. Dpa photos showed a van with tinted windows believed to be carrying Puigdemont as it arrived at the prison. Video footage also showed the same van leaving a police station in Schuby near the A7 highway.
A Spanish police official told the AP under customary condition of anonymity that Spain’s National Center for Intelligence and police agents from its international cooperation division helped German police to make the arrest.
Dpa reported that deputy state prosecutor Ralph Doepper, who is based in the northern town of Schleswig, said that a German court would likely decide by Monday whether Puigdemont would remain in custody pending the outcome of his extradition case.
Doepper said that “we are at the very beginning of our assessment.” He added: “we had information that he would be in Germany or would enter Germany.”
A Spanish Supreme Court judge reactivated an international arrest warrant for Puigdemont on Friday when he was visiting Finland. Spain has also issued five warrants for other separatist who fled the country.
Grassroots groups both for and against Catalan secession have called for protests later on Sunday in Barcelona. The pro-independence National Catalan Assembly has called on its supporters to march from office of the European Commission to the German Consulate, while pro-Spain supporters will gather at the office of Spain’s government representative for Catalonia.
Puigdemont, 55, is a former journalist and mayor of Girona who was thrust to the forefront of Catalonia’s independence push when he was handpicked by predecessor Artur Mas to become regional president in 2016. He withstood intense political pressure from Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and Spain’s courts as he piloted the secession bid.
Spain was plunged into its worst political crisis in three decades when Puigdemont’s government flouted a court ban and held an ad-hoc referendum on independence for the northeastern region in October.
The Catalan parliament’s subsequent declaration of independence received no international recognition and provoked a takeover of the regional government by Spanish authorities that they say won’t be lifted until a new government that respects Spain’s Constitution is in place.
Spain had originally asked for Puigdemont’s extradition from Belgium after he moved there, but later withdrew the request until judge Pablo Llarena concluded his investigation this week. Llarena ruled that a total of 25 Catalan separatists would be tried for rebellion, embezzlement or disobedience.
In the meantime, Puigdemont was free to make trips to Denmark, Switzerland and Finland, as part of his effort to gain international support for the secessionist movement.
Puigdemont was also able to successfully run a campaign as the head of his “Together for Catalonia” bloc in a regional election in December in which separatist parties maintained their slim majority in Catalonia’s regional parliament.
He had wanted to be re-elected as Catalonia’s regional president — albeit while remaining abroad to avoid arrest — but eventually was stopped by a Spanish court.
Separatists in Catalonia are currently trying to elect a leader for the regional government before a two-month time limit is up and new elections are called.
Spain’s Constitution says the nation is “indivisible” and any changes to its top law must be made by its national parliament in Madrid.
Nine people who promote Catalan secession have been placed in pre-trial custody to prevent what Llarena considered a flight risk or intention to continue with independence efforts.
Polls show Catalonia’s 7.5 million residents are equally divided over secession, although a majority support holding a legal referendum on the issue.
Keep going – good people of Catalan. Political prisoners in Europe in 2018. Erdoğan would be at home in Spain. #Catalonia pic.twitter.com/rNFyL1ZoZp
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) March 25, 2018
The main highway of Catalonia blocked by the protesters in Girona. Wow. pic.twitter.com/0gVprYI1q3
— Catalans for Yes ?️ (@CatalansForYes) March 25, 2018
What happens next for Clara #Ponsati?#Catalonia pic.twitter.com/6LP1jAEvYM
— Tom Macleod (@SkyNewsTom) March 25, 2018
People shouting ‘Streets will always be ours’ this evening in Barcelona as a response to Spanish repression in Catalonia. This chant became very popular after October 1st referendum. #Puigdemont #democracy #EuropeanUnion #Deutschland #PrimaveraCatalana pic.twitter.com/vtv8hidZot
— Punt☼DeAgitaci☼n ?️ (@StopMordazas) March 25, 2018
Catalan riot police used vans to try to run protestors down while dispersing the crowd earlier in Barcelona.
Via @enricbotella pic.twitter.com/pMxK5hbAfu— The Spain Report (@thespainreport) March 25, 2018
This is what happened the last time the world ignored police brutality in #Catalonia#Llibertatpresospolítics #PrimaveraCatalana#OpCatalunya#FreePoliticalPrisoners pic.twitter.com/6xDmWHF5nd
— TMT (@Touch_My_Tweets) March 25, 2018
Shocking pictures coming in from Catalonia tonight… but what an inspiring response from Catalanshttps://t.co/YIOybjtdnT
— The National (@ScotNational) March 25, 2018
?Tense protests after Puigdemont’s detention in #Germany. Protests leave at least 4 people arrested and 89 injured across #Catalonia ➡️https://t.co/bGTb37NLHq. pic.twitter.com/QLp5x4Ltas
— Catalan News (@catalannews) March 25, 2018
Catalan police, under direct Madrid’s command now, charges against #Catalonia‘s republicans demonstrating at the Spanish Govt Delegation in #Barcelona #FreeCatalanPoliticalPrisoners ?? #FreePuigdemontpic.twitter.com/j1HXWFLHpT
— David d’Enterria *X (@denterd) March 25, 2018