Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 16
EU Court Upholds Spanish Amnesty for 400 Catalan Independence Figures
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 16

EU Court Upholds Spanish Amnesty for 400 Catalan Independence Figures

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 16

Summary

  • The European Court of Justice ruled Thursday that Spain’s Catalonia amnesty law does not breach EU rules, backing a measure covering about 400 people tied to the 2014 and 2017 independence votes.
  • Judges said amnesty laws fall within member states’ competence and that EU law does not preclude Spain’s measure, which Pedro Sánchez’s government pushed through after the inconclusive July 2023 election.
  • Carles Puigdemont remains unable to return freely because a separate embezzlement charge is still subject to an arrest warrant and is not currently covered by the amnesty.
  • Spain’s constitutional court is expected to decide in coming months whether that embezzlement offense can also be included, a ruling that could determine the law’s biggest practical effect.
  • The decision eases one legal challenge to a law that triggered fierce backlash in Spain, with Sánchez’s allies hailing it while the opposition renewed accusations he traded impunity for power.

Insights

With EU court approval, why does Spain's amnesty law still leave Catalonia's ex-leader facing arrest?
Did the EU court's ruling on Spain's amnesty create a political loophole for other member states?
Spain's amnesty law was meant to heal divisions, but could it end up fracturing the country?