Los Angeles Times

U. N. panel to rule in Assange’s favor

An ‘ arbitrary detention’ finding would not end his risk of arrest, Britain says.

- BY CHRISTINA BOYLE Boyle is a special correspond­ent.

LONDON — For the last three and a half years, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has lived in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London to avoid arrest and extraditio­n to Sweden to face sexual assault accusation­s.

A United Nations panel is expected to announce Friday that his time there amounts to “arbitrary detention” because he has been unable to exercise his right to political asylum, which Ecuador has offered him.

British authoritie­s have said they have a legal obligation to arrest Assange if he steps out of the embassy.

The ruling by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, which is not legally binding, appears to be primarily a public relations triumph for Assange.

The decision was first reported Thursday by the BBC and later confirmed by Sweden’s foreign minister.

Assange has been holed up in the embassy since 2012, when he claimed asylum after Sweden issued a warrant for his arrest based on testimony from two women there who say he sexually assaulted them. He has not been charged and denies the claims. Sweden has since dropped much of the case but still wants to question him about an alleged rape.

For Assange, the case has always been about more than the sexual assault alle- gations. He fears that Sweden or Britain would turn him over to the U. S. for prosecutio­n on espionage charges stemming from WikiLeaks’ massive release of classified documents in 2010.

As the news broke Thursday, his supporters expressed hope that the standoff could f inally be brought to an end.

“For me, Julian Assange is somebody who has challenged power and actually been detained by power,” his friend Vaughan Smith told reporters. “I’m really pleased that there is a po- tential resolution and I hope that the British and Swedish authoritie­s will respond accordingl­y.”

But neither Sweden nor Britain indicated any change in their positions.

“The working group’s view differs from that of the Swedish authoritie­s,” a spokeswoma­n for Sweden’s Foreign Ministry said.

“We have been consistent­ly clear that Mr. Assange has never been arbitraril­y detained by the U. K. but is, in fact, voluntaril­y avoiding lawful arrest by choosing to remain in the Ecuadorean Embassy,” a spokesman for the British Foreign Office said.

Britain’s Metropolit­an Police said in a statement that because a European arrest warrant was still in place and an allegation of rape was outstandin­g, it has a legal obligation to arrest Assange if he leaves the embassy.

The U. N. panel took up the case after the Australian- born Assange f iled a complaint against Sweden and Britain in 2014.

He argued that being confined to the embassy was not his choice and that he was unable to get to Ecuador. He also claimed that being forced to live in roughly 320 square feet without sunlight or fresh air had taken a “significan­t toll” on his mental and physical health.

The panel has previously ruled against countries with poor human rights records, which could make Friday’s ruling awkward if Britain and Sweden decide to ignore it.

The two government­s were made aware of the decision in January. Assange released a statement Thursday on Twitter saying he would “accept arrest” by British police on Friday if the U. N. panel ruled against him.

But if the panel ruled in his favor, he wrote, he expected “the immediate return of my passport and the terminatio­n of further attempts to arrest me.”

Assange’s legal team has said it will hold a news conference in London on Friday after the official report has been published.

 ?? Niklas Halle’n AFP/ Getty I mages ?? WIKILEAKS founder Julian Assange has been holed up at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012 to avoid arrest on sexual assault accusation­s. Ecuador has offered him asylum, but he is unable to leave.
Niklas Halle’n AFP/ Getty I mages WIKILEAKS founder Julian Assange has been holed up at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012 to avoid arrest on sexual assault accusation­s. Ecuador has offered him asylum, but he is unable to leave.
 ?? Facundo Arrizabala­ga European Pressphoto Agency ?? THE EXPECTED ruling is not legally binding and would be mainly a public relations win for Assange.
Facundo Arrizabala­ga European Pressphoto Agency THE EXPECTED ruling is not legally binding and would be mainly a public relations win for Assange.

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