Spanish rapper Valtonyc, due to begin a three-and-a-half year jail term for "glorifying terror", insulting the king and issuing threats, was nowhere to be found today as debate over free speech raged in the country.
According to media reports Jose Miguel Arenas Beltran -- better known as Valtonyc -- has left the country, but there was no official confirmation and his whereabouts remained a mystery.
"We've been three weeks without any news from him," Mulay Embarek, a member of the 24-year-old's support group said in Brussels at an event on freedom of expression in the European parliament.
If it is confirmed, Valtonyc's escape will come just months after Catalan separatist leaders went into self-exile to escape Spanish authorities over their role in a failed secession bid.
He is just one of several Twitter users and rappers who have recently been judged -- and some sentenced to jail -- for glorifying terror or insulting the king in their comments or song lyrics, causing mounting concern over free speech in Spain.
Valtonyc was sentenced last year for lyrics published online in 2012 and 2013 at a time when he was a little-known rapper in the Balearic Islands.
These included: "Let them be as frightened as a police officer in the Basque Country" and "the king has a rendezvous at the village square, with a noose around his neck."
The reference to the Basque Country hinted at violence by ETA, the separatist group that for decades staged attacks across Spain that left hundreds of officials and civilians dead.
He also rapped against Jorge Campos, the head of Actua Baleares, a party that defends Spanish unity.
Valtonyc has since been hit by another complaint by Campos over a recent concert in which he shouted: "Kill a fucking Civil Guard (police) officer tonight."
The rapper had been free on bail pending the scheduled start of his prison term today.
But on Wednesday, he posted a cryptic tweet: "Tomorrow they will knock down the door of my house to put me in jail. For some songs. Tomorrow Spain is going to make a fool of itself, once more.
"I'm not going to make it easy for them, it's legitimate and an obligation to disobey this fascist state. Here, no one surrenders."
His lyrics have divided opinion, with some saying they should not land him in jail in a democracy, while others stress that free speech has its limits.
It's "not permission to say whatever one wants," said Antonio Torres del Moral, a constitutional law specialist.
But for Xavier Arbos, a constitutional law professor at the University of Barcelona, there is a clear "regression with regards to freedom of expression" in Spain.
"We're sending a message that groups which feel offended can restrict (people's) freedoms via criminal law, and that's very negative," he told AFP.
"The penal code must be the last resort and must be used under the principle of minimal intervention." In March, Amnesty International said a Spanish law banning "glorification of terrorism" had created a "chilling" environment in which people are increasingly afraid to express alternative views or make controversial jokes.
Earlier this week, Spanish Oscar-winner Javier Bardem also sounded the alarm over free speech in Spain as he came out in support of fellow actor Willy Toledo who is due to be questioned by a judge for alleged blasphemy.
"It seems to me that being able to (legally) punish (an opinion) is a setback that harks back to the era of Franco," Bardem told reporters in Madrid, referring to the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.
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