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Fugitive separatist Puigdemont returns to Spain but vanishes again

Carles Puigdemont, the former leader of Catalonia who fled Spain over his role in a failed 2017 independence bid, returned to Spain on Thursday after seven years on the run despite a pending arrest warrant, but promptly disappeared again.

Fugitive separatist Puigdemont returns to Spain but vanishes again
Catalonia's exiled separatist leader Carles Puigdemont arrives to deliver a speech on stage as his hardline separatist JxCAT party has scheduled a welcome ceremony, ahead of an investiture vote at the Parliament of Catalonia, in Barcelona on August 8, 2024.. (Photo by Cesar Manso / AFP)

Puigdemont shouted “Long live a free Catalonia!” as he climbed onto a stage in Barcelona to address thousands gathered near the Catalan regional parliament which is set to elect a new leader later in the day.

“I have come here to remind you that we are still here,” he said as many in the crowd waved red, yellow and blue Catalan independence flags.

After his brief address, Puigdemont appeared to head towards the nearby Catalan parliament but the assembly began an investiture vote to pick a new leader for the region without him being present.

It was not immediately clear where he was.

Police had set up road blocks in Barcelona and were searching cars to try to find Puigdemont, according to Spanish media reports.

Contacted by AFP, police declined to comment if such an operation was underway.

Nuria Pujol, a woman in her fifties who came to Barcelona from the Alt Penedes region to see Puigdemont, called him “a very noble person”.

PROFILE: Carles Puigdemont – Catalonia’s eternal separatist

“(He’s) the only one who believes in independence and has not stopped believing,” she added.

A small group of protesters gathered nearby, waving national Spanish flags and holding signs that read “Catalonia is Spain”, in a demonstration organised by far-right party Vox.

‘Problem with democracy’

Puigdemont’s dramatic return came just days after Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s Socialists struck a deal with moderate Catalan separatist party ERC – which competes with Puigdemont’s more hardline JxCAT – to make the Socialist candidate, Salvador Illa, the next head of the Catalan regional government.

The Socialists won the most seats in a regional election in May but failed to get a majority and the support of the ERC is crucial.

If a new Catalan regional government is not formed by August 26th, fresh elections will be held in October.

Puigdemont led the regional government of Catalonia in 2017, when it pushed ahead with an independence referendum despite a court ban, followed by a short-lived declaration of independence.

He fled Spain shortly after the independence bid to avoid prosecution and has since lived in Belgium and more recently France.

While Spain’s parliament in May passed an amnesty law for those involved in the botched secession bid, the Supreme Court ruled on July 1 that the measure would not fully apply to Puigdemont.

“A country that has an amnesty law and does not apply it, has a problem with democracy,” he said in his speech.

Path to independence?

Sánchez agreed to the amnesty law in exchange for JxCAT’s crucial support in Spain’s parliament for his fragile minority government, sparking huge street protests that were organised by the right wing.

He is now facing opposition from parts of his own Socialist party as well as the right over a proposal to give Catalonia full control of the taxes collected in the region.

The measure was promised to the ERC in exchange for the party’s support for Illa in Thursday’s Catalan investiture vote.

The proposal has for decades been one of the main demands of Catalan independence parties but critics argue it would deprive the central state of a substantial source of revenue.

READ MORE: The plan for Catalonia to handle its own finances separately from Spain

It must still be approved by Spain’s national parliament.

A similar system already exists in Spain’s northern Basque Country, which also has an active independence movement.

If Illa passes Thursday’s investiture vote, he will be the first head of Catalonia’s regional government since 2010 who does not come from the separatist camp.

The former health minister has defended the tax agreement made with the ERC, saying it was “favourable for all Catalans”.

“They are agreements designed to improve our finances without harming anyone and whilst respecting the principles of (fiscal) solidarity,” he said after securing the ERC’s support.

But former Socialist deputy prime minister Alfonso Guerra has said the tax agreement opens “a path towards a federal system and the independence of Catalonia”.

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SPANISH HISTORY

Great-grandchildren of Spanish dictator Franco sell luxury flats for €60M

Two great-grandchildren of Francisco Franco are making tens of millions selling luxury apartments in Madrid, proof that the family of the Spanish dictator has maintained its fortune decades after his death.

Great-grandchildren of Spanish dictator Franco sell luxury flats for €60M

In 2023, it emerged that the children of Mariola Martínez-Bordiú, Franco’s granddaughter, were planning to build luxury flats in the exclusive Calle Velázquez area of Madrid, kicking out the current tenants in order to do so.

Through the property company ARD V53, the brothers Francisco de Borja and Jaime Ardid Martínez-Bordiú bought several properties to remodel and sell. The wider Franco family already had several companies involved in the hotel and luxury property businesses.

READ ALSO: IN PICTURES: Franco exhumed, transported by helicopter, and reburied as Spain takes ‘step towards reconciliation’

It also has investments in public relations companies, parking spaces, and daycare centres. Incredibly, Spanish daily El País reported in 2019 that the Franco family also had a 17 percent share in a company that provides catering to La Moncloa, the official residence of the Spanish Prime Minister.

Companies with links to the Franco family also benefited from a tax amnesty offered by the Spanish government in 2012, something that revealed €7.6 million in undeclared foreign income.

In recent years, however, it seems the family’s property business has been going particularly well. According to Spanish digital newspaper El Confidencial, the two great-grandsons have so far signed sale contracts worth 57.77 million for seven properties on Madrid’s Calle Velázquez, on average more than 8 million per unit.

Spanish media reports the brothers bought 13 flats in total ranging from 350-390 m/2 each, as well as a 700 m/2 penthouse.

READ ALSO: How a town on Spain’s Costa Blanca became a Nazi retreat

Unlike the descendants of other former dictators around the world, the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Franco have largely continued to live lives of aristocratic luxury in Spain long after El Generalísimo died.

An article by Business Insider compared the lives of descendants of other notable dictators. Whereas the great-grandson of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin is a Georgia-based artist, for example, and the son of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin was a manager at logistics company DHL for over a decade, over the years Franco’s descendants have continued to amass immense levels of wealth and property both in Spain and abroad.

In 2019 El País estimated the wider Franco family fortune was around €102 million and had a staggering 404 properties spread around Spain.

The dead dictator’s grandchildren and great-grandchildren have or had assets including at least 89 homes, 29 country estates, five commercial premises, three rural plots, and a palace, which the family was eventually evicted from in 2020.

Franco himself reportedly earned 50,000 pesetas (roughly €300) per year in 1940, but with his great-grandchildren now selling luxury apartments for millions of euros a piece, it seems clear that the Franco family found other ways to amass a fortune during his dictatorship.

READ ALSO: Spain finally evicts Franco family from late dictator’s summer palace

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