Catalan Separatists: Trial ‘Unique Moment’ to be Heard

Catalan Separatists: Trial ‘Unique Moment’ to be Heard

As a hunger strike by jailed Catalan separatist politicians enters its third week and begins to take a toll on their health, they say their upcoming treason trial will allow them to peacefully promote their cause for independence from Spain, reports VOA News.

In rare interviews in a prison north of Barcelona, Jordi Sanchez and Jordi Turull, who has been in a medical ward since Friday, repeated calls for dialogue between Catalans regional government and Spains central authorities in Madrid. They also rejected any depiction of the secessionist movement in the prosperous northeastern region of Catalonia as violent.

Sanchez told The Associated Press that their trial, set to begin early next year, will be a unique moment to denounce the attitude of the Kingdom of Spain contrary to the political and democratic rights in Catalonia.

We are not going to let this opportunity go to waste, he added.

Hearing Tuesday

Spain says the 22 defendants in the case are being prosecuted not for their ideas but for defying court orders by holding a banned independence referendum in Catalonia last year and making an illegal attempt to secede.

Some of them have been indicted on charges of rebellion or sedition and face decades in prison in what local media have dubbed the trial of the century in Spains Supreme Court. A preliminary hearing will be Tuesday, although the defendants are not expected in court until weeks later.

Catalonias banned independence referendum in October 2017, Spains violent crackdown to stop it and a subsequent declaration of independence by Catalan authorities led to an unprecedented seven-month takeover by central authorities of the region of 7.4 million people.

More than a year later, the shockwaves from the Catalan independence movement are still being felt across Spain. A political divide is growing between Catalan and Spanish nationalism, a development that has fueled the momentum of a far-right populist party that recently won a dozen seats in Andalusias regional parliament.

Four on hunger strike

Sanchez emerged wearing three layers of clothes despite normal heating in the modern prison managed by the Catalan government. His doctor says a permanent chill is the result of not ingesting calories and adds that the 54 year-old has lost more than 5 kilograms (11 pounds) since he began fasting on Dec. 1.

Turull, a former candidate to become the regions chief, was sent to the Lledoners prison infirmary Friday because his kidneys have been affected after he shed more than 13 pounds in two weeks. He tricks his body to ignore its hunger with nicotine.

Two more former Catalan cabinet members joined the strike Dec. 3, but other inmates from a competing separatist political group, including former Catalan Vice President Oriol Junqueras, have chosen not to join, again exposing different approaches within the independence movement.

Turull said his protest comes with a sense of responsibility and he is not looking to starve to death.

Its end depends on how far our strength takes us and on achieving our goal of calling attention to Spains judicial problem, the 52-year-old lawyer said.

Goal: European court

Their aim is to press Spains Constitutional Court to rule on appeals about their political rights and their prolonged pre-trial jailing. The strikers think the court is deliberately trying to block them from reaching the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, where they hope to expose the judicial flaws they see at home.

The Spanish top court has recently begun to issue some rulings in a series of appeals and says that its working as fast as the judicial calendar allows it to in dealing with the complexity of a case that affects fundamental rights and a careful analysis of criminal law.

Central Spanish authorities see no reason for the hunger strike.

Their arguments are false. They will have a fair trial because in Spain the judiciary is independent, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said recently, adding that his government rejects both taking politics to court and politicizing justice.

Sanchez, a Socialist, has tried a conciliatory tone, but his approach has not reduced tensions with the Catalan separatists. Hardening rhetoric against the nationalists has spread across Spains political spectrum and coincided with the ascent of Vox, a far-right party.

Far right strengthens

Turull, a longtime secessionist, says Spains far right is dragging other parties to its extremism and becoming a machine of generating tensions in Catalonia. He also says Sanchez should consider dialogue more than ever, including on the underlying issue of Catalan self-determination.

No prime minister in Spain has agreed to that in the past, arguing it goes against Spains constitution. With polls showing that Catalan society is evenly divided on the issue of independence, Sanchez instead defends more self-government in Catalonia as a solution, and says he would rather spend time talking about social and economic policies.