Catalan president names jailed, exiled ministers to govt

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BARCELONA: Catalonia’s new president Quim Torra on Saturday named two former ministers, jailed by Madrid for backing independence from Spain, together with two others who fled into exile, to his regional government.

Torra appointed his government by decree, but it could still be blocked by Spain, which has insisted his administration be “legal and viable” after it imposed direct rule on the region in October when the then Catalan government declared independence.

Torra — who was elected by the Catalan parliament on Monday and sworn in on Thursday — named 13 “advisors” to his government, including Jordi Turull and Josep Rull who are currently being held in custody just outside Madrid.

Two others, Toni Comin and Lluis Puig, are in exile in Belgium, where they fled with deposed Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont.

Turull and Rull both accepted their nominations on Twitter. Their lawyers have asked for both to be freed provisionally so they can take up their duties from Wednesday.

The appointment of Torra as Catalan leader marks the end of nearly seven months of political limbo in the northeastern Spanish region, which has been under direct rule from Madrid since the central government deposed Puigdemont following a failed declaration of independence on October 27.

Puigdemont is currently in Berlin awaiting potential extradition to Spain, where he faces jail on charges of rebellion and misuse of public funds.

Torra, a 55-year-old editor who has long campaigned for independence and was handpicked by Puigdemont, described himself as a “caretaker president” who considers Puigdemont as the “legitimate” leader.

In a brief swearing-in ceremony on Thursday, Torra promised to “loyally fulfil the duties of the post of regional president being faithful to the will of the Catalan people represented by the Catalan parliament.”

But he did not promise to obey the Spanish Constitution nor the statute that regulates Catalonia’s autonomy.

He appeared flanked only by a Catalan flag, without the traditional Spanish flag and portrait of the king that protocol states must be present, in a small side-room of the regional government building in Barcelona.