"He will not go to Madrid and I have suggested that he be questioned here in Belgium," Belgian lawyer Paul Bekaert told Spanish television channel TV3.
Puigdemont, currently in Brussels, and 13 other members of his dismissed Catalan cabinet were told late yesterday to be at Spain's top criminal court today and tomorrow.
The court wants to question them in an investigation over Catalonia's independence drive, which has plunged Spain into its biggest crisis in decades.
The hearing by the National Court, which deals with major criminal cases, could see the 14 formally charged.
Oriol Junqueras, Puigdemont's deputy, will attend, a spokesman for his party said. But it was unclear if others would do too.
Bekaert, a Belgian lawyer hired by Puigdemont, told Dutch broadcaster NOS late yesterday that if his new client travelled to Spain there is a "good chance that he would be detained".
Bekaert also told Flemish-language Belgian TV channel VTM that he did not foresee Puigdemont returning "within the coming weeks".
Yesterday Puigdemont told a packed news conference in Brussels -- before the court summons was announced -- that he would not return until he had guarantees that legal proceedings would be impartial.
He insisted his cabinet remained "legitimate" despite having been dismissed by Madrid on Friday and said he was in Brussels "for safety purposes and freedom".
"We want to denounce the politicisation of the Spanish justice system... and to explain to the world the Spanish state's serious democratic deficiencies," he said.
An October 1 referendum saw ugly scenes as Spanish police tried to prevent people voting. Puigdemont's camp said the result was a "yes" to secession but turnout was just 43 percent.
Puigdemont insists that this gave the Catalan parliament a mandate to declare independence last Friday.
The same day Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government sacked the regional government and imposed direct control under a never before used article of the constitution.
There had been speculation that Catalan leaders and civil servants might refuse to cooperate but in the event the takeover of regional powers by Madrid has passed off smoothly.
However, divisions appear to be growing in the separatist camp.
Santi Vila, a Catalan minister who resigned last week, accused his former colleagues yesterday of "naivety" and not being ready for independence.
Fernando Vallespin, a political scientist in Madrid, said that Puigdemont, a former journalist, "is more interested in obtaining media attention than escaping justice".
"It's a media war. The aim of (the Catalan executive) has been to try and present the Spanish state as an oppressor state and Puigdemont needs to feed this narrative," he said.
"In an election campaign a free Puigdemont won't boost your score, but a Puigdemont in jail does," Bartomeus, a professor at Barcelona Autonomous University, told AFP.
Puigdemont retains support among some ordinary citizens in Catalonia.
In Barcelona, sales manager Maria Angels Selgas, 60, said he remained Catalan president for her.
"If (the Spanish government) humiliate him then they humiliate also the more than two million Catalans who voted 'yes' in the referendum," she told AFP.
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