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POLITICS

Catalan separatist leader to meet Spain’s PM amid amnesty controversy

The main Catalan separatist party has said its exiled leader Carles Puigdemont was to meet with Pedro Sánchez in an announcement that the Spanish premier did not confirm.

Catalan separatist leader to meet Spain's PM amid amnesty controversy
Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont (L) and Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez. The amnesty bill is currently making its way through the Spanish parliament and will likely become law in the coming months, allowing the courts to drop the charges against hundreds of separatists. (Photo by Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD and Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

“They will meet and hold talks as they should,” Jordi Turull, secretary general of the hardline separatist JxCat party told Spain’s TVE public television, without saying when or where it would happen.

The meeting would help “move forward the resolution of the political conflict” in Catalonia that has sparked years of tension between the separatist movement and the government in Madrid.

Speaking to reporters on arrival at a European Council meeting in Brussels, Sánchez said he had no meeting scheduled with Puigdemont, a member of the European Parliament who has not set foot in Spain since 2017.

“Looking at my agenda, I have a meeting on December 21st with (Catalan regional leader Pere) Aragonès,” he added, saying details of his meetings were publicly available.

Sánchez began a new term in office in mid-November thanks to the crucial support of JxCat’s seven lawmakers in exchange for a controversial amnesty deal for those facing legal action over the failed 2017 independence bid.

The amnesty bill is currently making its way through the Spanish parliament and will likely become law in the coming months, allowing the courts to drop the charges against hundreds of separatists.

The biggest beneficiary will be Puigdemont, Catalan regional leader at the time, who staged a banned referendum then made a short-lived declaration of independence, sparking Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

He fled to Belgium to dodge prosecution but the amnesty will let him return home.

The amnesty has enraged Spain’s right-wing opposition which views Puigdemont as public enemy number one and prompted several huge street protests with demonstrators expressing fury at the plan.

More worrying for Sánchez is that the amnesty has deeply divided his Socialists, with a survey in El Mundo this week showing 45.8 percent of those who voted for him in July opposed the measure.

The suggestion Sánchez would meet the exiled JxCat leader was swiftly denounced by the right-wing opposition Popular Party (PP).

“We’re talking about the prime minister of Spain meeting a fugitive from justice,” fumed the PP’s secretary-general Cuca Gamarra, saying Sánchez would only “humiliate himself even more” by meeting Puigdemont.

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BREXIT

Spain and UK insist post-Brexit Gibraltar deal is ‘getting closer’

After at least two and a half years of negotiations, Britain and Spain insisted they were closer to a deal on post-Brexit arrangements for disputed Gibraltar after they made "important breakthroughs" in talks on Thursday.

Spain and UK insist post-Brexit Gibraltar deal is 'getting closer'

The two countries are aiming for an agreement allowing free circulation of goods and people between Gibraltar and Spain.

“Today’s discussions took place in a constructive atmosphere, with important breakthroughs and additional areas of agreement,” the United Kingdom, European Commission, Spain and Gibraltar said in a statement.

“All sides are reassured that the agreement is getting closer and will work closely and rapidly on outstanding areas towards an overall EU-UK agreement,” they added.

Foreign ministers from Britain and Spain met alongside European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic and Gibraltar government chief Fabian Picardo in a bid to reach a deal over the tiny British territory’s status following Britain’s 2020 exit from the European Union.

It is the second time they have met in this format after talks in April.

READ ALSO: What Brits need to know about crossing the border from Gibraltar to Spain

Sefcovic told reporters that the talks covered “new areas” that had not been addressed in the past including the environment, mobility and trade.

Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares would not say what outstanding issues remained and told a press conference no date had been set for the next meeting.

But he said technical teams would be in contact “immediately”.

Britain and Spain have disputed control of the tiny territory since it was ceded to Britain in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht.

The two countries reached a provisional deal in 2020 on free access for goods and people after Brexit, but no definitive agreement has been reached.

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