The Scotsman

Sweden charges man at centre of Nobel Prize sex abuse allegation­s

● Prosecutor says evidence against Arnault is ‘robust and sufficient’

- By JAN M OLSEN

The man at the centre of a sex abuse and financial crimes scandal at the academy that awards the Nobel Prize in literature has been charged with two counts of rape of a woman in 2011.

Swedish prosecutor Christina Voigt said the evidence against Jean-claude Arnault “is robust and sufficient for prosecutio­n”.

Arnault, a well-known figure in Sweden who ran a cultural centre, is married to poet and member of the Swedish Academy Katarina Frostenson. He has denied this and other sex abuse allegation­s.

In April, the Swedish Academy said an internal investi- gation into sexual misconduct allegation­s found that “unacceptab­le behavior in the form of unwanted intimacy” has taken place within the ranks of the prestigiou­s institutio­n.

The secretive 18-member board has in recent months been embroiled in a sex abuse scandal that investigat­ors concluded was “not generally known”.

It has led to the departure of at least six of members of the academy and tarnished the prize’s reputation.

The academy had commission­ed lawyers to investigat­e sexual misconduct claims from 18 women against Arnault. In April, it decided to hand over the internal report to judicial authoritie­s.

Violence was used in one case involving Arnault, and in the second incident the victim was asleep, Ms Voight said, adding that seven people back the victim’s claim.

Many in the Scandinavi­an nation, known for promot- ing gender equality, have expressed concerns over the case that has exposed bitter divisions within the academy, whose members are appointed for life, and given rise to accusation­s of patriarcha­l leanings among some members.

Last month, the academy announced that no prize will be awarded this year.

The protest has grown out of what began as Sweden’s own #Metoo moment in November when the country saw thousands of sexual misconduct allegation­s surfacing from all walks of life.

It hit the academy when 18 women came forward in a Swedish newspaper with accusation­s against Arnault.

He was banned in December by the academy from attending a Nobel banquet after Dagens Nyheter, one of Sweden’s largest newspapers, pub- lished the allegation­s. He has also been suspected of violating century-old Nobel rules by leaking names of winners of the prestigiou­s award. He has allegedly leaked winners’ names seven times, starting in 1996. It was not clear who the names were disclosed to.

The academy said that following what it called “a serious crisis” it had decided to hand over the report to relevant judicial authoritie­s. The Swedish Economic Crime Authority said it had received the academy report but declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigat­ion.

Last year after the first allegation­s surfaced, annual funding to Arnault’s centre was immediatel­y stopped. The Academy then stressed it had not been paid to Arnault personally.

The probe found no evidence that Arnault “had any direct or indirect influence on” the handing out of funds since it first got it in 2010.

 ??  ?? 0 Jean-claude Arnault has denied all sex abuse allegation­s
0 Jean-claude Arnault has denied all sex abuse allegation­s

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