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EU’s top court upholds Spain’s amnesty law for Catalan separatists

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 3:50 AM

BARCELONA, July 16 (Reuters) – A disputed Spanish law granting an amnesty to those involved in Catalonia’s separatist drive does not violate ​European Union rules, the EU’s top ‌court said on Thursday, in a boost to the Spanish government and its Catalan allies.

The amnesty approved in 2024 by the Spanish lower house was part of ‌an ​agreement between the ruling Socialist ⁠Party and Catalan ⁠separatist groups, which allowed Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez to stay in power in 2023, prompting unsuccessful attempts to block it by the conservative ​opposition.

Thursday’s judgments clarified the scope and limits of member states’ powers in adopting amnesty ⁠laws within the framework ⁠of EU rules.

In its decision, the ​Court of Justice (CJEU) ruled that EU law does not ​preclude the Spanish amnesty law, as its ‌adoption and application fall within the competence of member states.

“(The court) does not oppose a law which, in order to reduce institutional and ⁠political tensions and facilitate a process of reconciliation, provides for the extinction of criminal liability,” one of ⁠the CJEU’s judges ‌said when delivering the verdict.

However, ⁠the CJEU opposed one aspect of ​the ‌amnesty law, saying it cannot impose ​on Spanish ⁠courts the obligation of lifting in a two-month period accounting responsibilities or preliminary proceedings set by national courts if they are awaiting a decision by the CJEU.

(Reporting by Joan Faus; Editing by ​David Latona)