Home > Catalonia's former president says political move is behind vote to remove immunity

News
Catalonia's former president says political move is behind vote to remove immunity

Description

Brussels (Belgium), Feb 24 (EFE), (Camera: Leo Rodríguez).- Catalonia's former regional president Carles Puigdemont said on Wednesday that he still hopes to obtain the immunity after the EU lawmakers voted to recommend lifting the immunity of three Catalan MEPs wanted by Spain for sedition after a failed 2017 independence bid.FOOTAGE AND SOUNDBITES OF CARLES PUIGDEMONT, CATALONIA'S FORMER REGIONAL LEADER, ON WEDNESDAY IN BRUSSELS:"We have never given up. Not even in a plenary session although we know what is going on. And we know that there is a political move so the Spanish standards are brought into the European Parliament too."

Added on the 24/02/2021 13:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés

To customise your video :

Or Create an account

More videos on the subject

  • Stein In Deep With FEC

    Jill Stein was the US Green Party's 2016 candidate for president. Business Insider reports that she owes the Federal Election Commission more than $66,000 in campaign finance violations. In 2016 Stein raised $7.3 million for a recount. In December 2016, Stein promised that her donors would get to vote on how to spend these surplus funds. That never happened. Instead, Stein spent millions on election-related litigation in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. She gave raises and "performance bonuses" to her core 2016 campaign staff. She spent $113,000 on her legal defense before the US Senate's Russia investigation.

    30/10/2020 - Wochit
  • ‘We Have Won the Right to an Independent State’ – Catalonia President Puigdemont

    “We have won the right to an independent state, built as a republic,’ Catalan President Carles Puigdemont said in a statement in Barcelona on Sunday, following a disputed referendum on independence from Spain plagued by violence and protests. According to Catalan officials, 90% of voters backed independence from Spain. The Spanish government deemed the ballot illegal and Spanish police officers used force in an attempt to stop the vote.

    04/10/2017 - RT Ruptly EN
  • 'There Was No Referendum' - Spanish Prime Minister Rajoy

    "Today there was no referendum on self-determination in Catalonia," Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in a speech just a matter of minutes after the polls closed on a Catalan referedum for independence from Spain. Rajoy was resolute in his stance that Spain is indivisible and that the referendum would not be recognised.

    04/10/2017 - RT Ruptly EN
  • Panama's president-elect Mulino is 'nobody's puppet'

    Panama's president-elect Jose Raul Mulino says he is "nobody's puppet," a reference to former president Ricardo Martinelli (2009-2014), whom he replaced as a candidate after being convicted of money laundering and taking refuge in the Nicaraguan embassy. "I'm not here because someone put me here," he says to cheers from the crowd during his victory speech at a Panama City hotel. SOUNDBITE

    06/05/2024 - AFPTV - First images
  • Panama's President-elect Mulino accepts election win

    Right-wing lawyer Jose Raul Mulino accepts victory as Panama's president-elect with 34% of the vote, nine points above his immediate follower, announced the Electoral Tribunal after 90% of the polling stations had been counted. "I accept the results expressed, which represent the will of the majority of Panamanians within our democracy," he says. SOUNDBITE

    06/05/2024 - AFPTV - First images
  • Obama attends arrival ceremony in Laos

    U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

    06/09/2016 - Reuters EN

More videosNews

Watch video of  - DemainEntreprendre - épisode 12 - Label : Economie wallonne -
News

DemainEntreprendre - épisode 12

29/04/2021 12:55:32