Los Angeles Times

Assange hails U. N. panel’s report

But British authoritie­s disagree that the WikiLeaks founder should walk free.

- By Christina Boyle

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Friday he felt vindicated by the f indings of a United Nations panel that ruled he should be allowed to walk free.

The Australian citizen also warned there could be serious diplomatic consequenc­es for Britain and Sweden if they continue to reject the f indings of a “world expert body.”

Assange made a 10- minute statement at a news conference held by his legal team. He appeared via video link from the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where he has been seeking political asylum.

Wearing a jacket and tie and sitting in front of a backdrop branded with the website Justice4As­sange.com, he alluded to the toll his situation has taken on him.

“I’ve been detained now without charge in this country, the United Kingdom, for 5 ½ years. That’s 5 ½ years where I’ve had great difficulty seeing my family and seeing my children,” he said.

He appeared later on a balcony at the embassy as a large crowd of journalist­s and onlookers gathered on the road below. Holding a copy of the United Nations report that said he is “entitled to his freedom of movement” as well as compensati­on, he declared: “How sweet it is.”

In the report published Friday morning, the U. N.’ s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said Assange has been “arbitraril­y detained” in Britain since December 2010, when he was f irst sought for questionin­g on allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

But the British government swiftly issued a strongly worded statement Friday saying that “this changes nothing” and that it would “formally contest” the working group’s ruling.

“The opinion of the U. N. Working Group ignores the facts and the well- recognized protection­s of the British legal system,” a government spokesman said. “He is, in fact, voluntaril­y avoiding lawful arrest by choosing to remain in the Ecuadorean Embassy.

“We are deeply frustrated that this unacceptab­le situation is still being allowed to continue,” the spokesman said.

The U. N. report concluded that Assange has been subjected to different forms of deprivatio­n of liberty dating to 2010 when he was held in “initial detention in Wandsworth prison, which was followed by house arrest and his confinemen­t at the Ecuadorean Embassy.”

It also found there was a “lack of diligence” on the part of the Swedish prosecutor’s office in its investigat­ions, which has resulted in Assange’s lengthy loss of freedom.

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 a rape allegation.

Assange 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.

British police say they will arrest Assange if he steps outside the embassy, as a European arrest warrant remains in place and Britain has a legal obligation to extradite him.

Assange’s legal team said that Friday’s report was a “damning indictment” of the way his case has been handled and that their client was a “victim of a significan­t miscarriag­e of justice” because of his whistle- blowing activities. They also said his detention amounted to a form of mental torture.

“There is light at the end of the tunnel. We just need the United Kingdom and Sweden to step up to the plate so that Julian can f inally come out into the light,” lawyer Melinda Taylor said.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, however, described the U. N. panel’s f indings as “ridiculous” and branded Assange a “fugitive from justice.”

“He is hiding from justice in the embassy,” Hammond said. “He can come out onto the pavement any time he chooses. He is not being detained by us, but he will have to face justice in Sweden if he chooses to do so, and it’s right that he should not be able to escape justice.

“This is frankly a ridiculous f inding by the working group, and we reject it,” he said.

Assange told the news conference that Hammond’s comments were “beneath the stature that a foreign secretary should express in this situation.”

“I consider the outcome in this case to be vindicatio­n,” he said. “The time for appeal is over.”

The U. N. panel’s findings were widely anticipate­d to rule in Assange’s favor, and he issued a statement Thursday saying that if his case were upheld he should have his passport returned and arrest warrants dropped.

But that appears highly unlikely.

Swedish authoritie­s have also said they do not agree with the assessment of the working group.

The working group is made up of five legal experts from around the world and can rule on whether imprisonme­nt or detention is unlawful. Its findings help to inf luence government­s but are not legally binding.

Boyle is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Facundo Arrizabala­ga
European Pressphoto Agency ?? JULIAN ASSANGE appears on the balcony of the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where he has been seeking political asylum since 2012. He has been sought for questionin­g about allegation­s of sexual misconduct. British authoritie­s say they will arrest him if...
Facundo Arrizabala­ga European Pressphoto Agency JULIAN ASSANGE appears on the balcony of the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where he has been seeking political asylum since 2012. He has been sought for questionin­g about allegation­s of sexual misconduct. British authoritie­s say they will arrest him if...

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