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Catalan separatist Carles Puigdemont returns to Barcelona despite arrest warrant – Europe live

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Stephen Burgen

After his brief speech, Carles Puigdemont was whisked through the crowd in the direction of the parliament building, surrounded by members of his Together for Catalunya party.

When the group reached parliament a few minutes ago, Puigdemont was not among them.

A helicopter is now patrolling above the parliament building but there will be questions asked if he evades arrest and slips back to his base in the south of France.

Stephen Burgen

Stephen Burgen reports from Barcelona this morning:

It’s not clear that anyone really expected him to appear but on the dot of nine o’clock there he was, just like he’d never been away.

There was already an air of nostalgia for the days when many of the people assembled here believed that independence was within their grasp. The slogans on the T-shirts recounted the 12 years of meetings and marches that in the end brought, not independence, but bitterness and division and now the first non-nationalist Catalan government in 20 years.

It was on this very spot in 2017 that Carles Puigdemont appeared on a giant screen to declare the republic, only to announce eight seconds later that the declaration had been suspended. For those eight seconds the separatists thought their dream had come true, but it was brief journey from ecstasy to disappointment.

But now their leader was back, right here in the flesh.

History has moved on but for a few minutes here time stood still.

Catalan independence leader and former president Carles Puigdemont addresses supporters after his arrival near the Catalan parliament to attend the investiture debate in Barcelona, Spain, Thursday August 8. Photograph: Emilio Morenatti/AP

Puigdemont returns to Spain after years-long absence

Fugitive former Catalan regional president Carles Puigdemont has returned to Spain, addressing a crowd in Barcelona this morning.

I’ve come today to remind you that we’re still here.

Puigdemont is facing likely arrest.

Carles Puigdemont arrives 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. Photograph: Manaure Quintero/AFP/Getty Images
Pro-independence supporters wave Catalan “Estelada” flags as Catalonia’s exiled separatist leader Carles Puigdemont arrives on stage to deliver a speech. Photograph: Manaure Quintero/AFP/Getty Images

Who is Carles Puigdemont?

Puigdemont is a Catalan separatist from the Junts per Catalunya party who served as the regional president in 2016-2017. He has been living in self-imposed exile for the past seven years.

After fleeing Spain to avoid arrest for his role in the botched secession, leaving others in his cabinet to face trial and imprisonment, he reinvented himself in the small Belgian town of Waterloo as an MEP and the leader of what he termed a Catalan “government in exile”. Others, less charitably, had viewed him as an “operetta nationalist” and a spent, diminished figure.

But in May, Spanish MPs gave their final approval to the deeply divisive amnesty law that the country’s socialist prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, offered Catalan separatists in return for helping him back to power after last year’s inconclusive general election.

Nevertheless, in July, Spain’s supreme court upheld arrest warrants for Puigdemont and others who are charged with misuse of public funds, ruling that the amnesty law did not apply to them.

This week, Puigdemont announced he will be at the Catalan parliament in Barcelona as it swears in the region’s new leader. The socialist politician Salvador Illa is set to be appointed as the new Catalan president.

Lili Bayer and Sam Jones

Carles Puigdemont delivers a speech at Amelie-les-Bains, south-western France on July 27, 2024. Photograph: Idriss Bigou-Gilles/AFP/Getty Images

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