The Star Malaysia

Man in Nobel scandal on trial

Cultural figure denies two counts of raping a woman in 2011

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STOCKHOLM: The man at the centre of a sexual assault scandal that prompted the Swedish Academy to postpone this year’s Nobel Literature Prize denied two counts of rape at the start of his trial.

Frenchman Jean-Claude Arnault was an influentia­l figure on Stockholm’s cultural scene for decades, until the explosive sexual assault accusation­s against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein sparked a wave of similar allegation­s around the world.

Married to Katarina Frostenson, a member of the Swedish Academy which has been selecting Nobel literature laureates since 1901, Arnault ran the Forum club in Stockholm. It was a key meeting place for the cultural elite and a popular spot among aspiring young authors hoping to make contact with publishers and writers.

The case against him erupted a month after the rape and sexual abuse accusation­s against Weinstein which sparked the worldwide #MeToo campaign.

Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter in November 2017 published testimonie­s of 18 women claiming to have been raped, sexually assaulted or harassed by Arnault.

Arnault appeared in Stockholm’s district court yesterday to face two charges of rape against one woman.

“My client denies the charges,” his lawyer Bjorn Hurtig told the court.

The judge then ruled the proceeding­s would be held behind closed doors, as is common in rape cases to protect the victim.

According to the charge sheet, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, the 72-year-old allegedly forced the victim – who was in a state of “intense fear”– to have oral sex and intercours­e in a Stockholm apartment on Oct 5, 2011.

Arnault is also accused of raping her during the night of Dec 2-3 in the same apartment while she was asleep. He faces up to six years in prison if found guilty.

The victim’s identity has not been disclosed, and she was not present in the courtroom at the opening of the trial though she was to appear later.

The scandal rocked the Swedish Academy due to its long-standing and close ties to Arnault.

An internal Academy investigat­ion revealed that several members, as well as wives and daughters of members, had also experience­d “unwanted intimacy” and “inappropri­ate” behaviour from the accused.

Elise Karlsson, a writer who was one of the 18 who spoke out in Dagens Nyheter, said she was working under precarious conditions in 2008 when she was 27 years old.

“I suddenly felt his hands on my buttocks (and) at no point had I shown any interest. I was shocked and told him‘do not touch me’ and slapped him,” she said in a November interview.

Karlsson said Arnault later approached her and said she “would never find work” in the sector again.

According to Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet, Arnault was born in Marseille in 1946 to Russian refugee parents. He arrived in Sweden in the late 1960s to study photograph­y.

In a 2006 interview with Dagens Nyheter on his 60th birthday, he said he participat­ed in France’s May 1968 civil demonstrat­ions.

He had close ties to some of the Academy’s 18 members.

The Academy, founded in 1786, is traditiona­lly known for integrity and discretion, with its meetings and decisions shrouded in secrecy.

But the scandal has unveiled what critics have called “a culture of silence”, “nepotism” and “stale macho values” within the prestigiou­s institutio­n.

 ?? — AFP ?? The accused: Arnault arriving at the district court in Stockholm.
— AFP The accused: Arnault arriving at the district court in Stockholm.

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