Catalan Parliament postpones re-election of fugitive leader

The speaker of Catalonia’s Parliament Roger Torrent has defended ousted separatist leader Carles Puigdemont’s right to return to power. (AFP)
Updated 30 January 2018
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Catalan Parliament postpones re-election of fugitive leader

BARCELONA: Catalonia’s Parliament speaker on Tuesday postponed a session intended to re-elect the region’s fugitive ex-president, saying the planned meeting would not take place until there were guarantees Spanish authorities “won’t interfere.”
The decision comes after Spain’s top court ruled Saturday that Carles Puigdemont, who has fled to Belgium and faces arrest if he returns, could only be re-elected if physically present in the Parliament in Barcelona. The court also ordered that he must obtain permission to appear at Parliament from the judge investigating him over Catalonia’s independence bid.
Puigdemont is one of more than a dozen Catalan political figures facing possible rebellion and sedition charges following the previous Parliament’s illegal and unsuccessful declaration of independence in October, which brought Spain’s worst political crisis in decades to a head.
The decision leaves the future government of the prosperous region in something of a limbo.
Spain seized control of the region by firing Puigdemont and his government and dissolving Parliament following the independence declaration. It says it will keep control until a new government takes office following elections held Dec. 21. The Parliament was initially scheduled to have a first investiture vote by Wednesday.
Puigdemont’s party has appealed to the top court to annul Saturday’s ruling, arguing that their leader, as an elected lawmaker, has political immunity and is entitled to be become regional president. The court was expected to rule later Tuesday.
Earlier, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy urged the Catalan Parliament to drop Puigdemont’s candidacy and opt for a lawmaker not entangled in legal proceedings.
Rajoy said the “most sensible” thing for the Parliament speaker would be to propose a “clean candidate” who is willing to obey the law and work for the return of normality in Catalonia, a region of 7.5 million inhabitants and which represents a fifth of Spain’s GDP.
“I am not going to propose a candidate other than Puigdemont,” Catalan Parliament speaker Roger Torrent said Tuesday. “President Puigdemont has all the right to be elected.”

“The Spanish government and the Constitutional court aim to violate the rights of millions of Catalans and this we will not accept,” he added.
Nonetheless, Torrent said the session to hold the vote would be postponed.
The Spanish government welcomed that decision. An official speaking anonymously in line with government rules said that pressure applied by the government and the country’s top court “have prevented a mockery of our democracy.”


Peru Congress impeaches interim president after four months in office

Updated 6 sec ago
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Peru Congress impeaches interim president after four months in office

  • Jose Jeri, 39, was accused in the irregular hiring of several women in his government, and of suspected graft
  • Peru has now burned through seven presidents since 2016, several of them impeached, investigated or convicted of wrongdoing

LIMA: Peru’s Congress on Tuesday impeached interim president Jose Jeri, the Latin American country’s seventh head of state in 10 years and only the latest toppled over graft claims.
Jeri, 39, was accused in the irregular hiring of several women in his government, and of suspected graft involving a Chinese businessman.
In office since last October, Jeri took over from unpopular leader Dina Boluarte, who was also impeached amid protests against corruption and a wave of violence linked to organized crime.
Prosecutors last week opened an investigation into “whether the head of state exercised undue influence” in government appointments.
Jeri has protested his innocence.
Jeri — at the time the head of Peru’s unicameral parliament — was appointed last year to serve out the remainder of Boluarte’s term, which runs until July, when a new president will take over following elections on April 12.
He is constitutionally barred from seeking election.
Jeri has found himself in the spotlight over claims revealed by investigative TV program Cuarto Poder that five women were improperly given jobs in the president’s office and the environment ministry after meeting with Jeri.
Prosecutors said there were in fact nine women.
Jeri is also under investigation for alleged “illegal sponsorship of interests” following a secret meeting with a Chinese businessman with commercial ties with the government.

- Institutional crisis -

Some observers have pointed to possible politicking in the censure of Jeri just weeks before elections for which over 30 candidates — a record — have tossed their hat into the ring.
The candidate from the right-wing Popular Renewal party, Rafael Lopez Aliaga, who leads in opinion polls, has been among the most vocal in calling for Jeri’s ouster.
Congress is now set to elect its own new leader on Wednesday to replace a caretaker in the post. The new parliament president will automatically take over as Peru’s interim president until July.
“It will be difficult to find a replacement with political legitimacy in the current Congress, with evidence of mediocrity and strong suspicion of widespread corruption,” political analyst Augusto Alvarez told AFP ahead of Tuesday’s vote.
Peru has now burned through seven presidents since 2016, several of them impeached, investigated or convicted of wrongdoing.
The South American country is also gripped by a wave of extortion that has claimed dozens of lives, particularly of bus drivers — some shot at the wheel if their companies refuse to pay protection money.
In two years, the number of extortion cases reported in Peru jumped more than tenfold — from 2,396 to over 25,000 in 2025.