The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

U.K.-U.S. treaty bans extraditio­n of Assange, lawyer says

Assange faces 18 counts in United States

- MICHAEL HOLDEN

LONDON — Lawyers for Julian Assange said on Thursday they will argue that the WikiLeaks founder cannot be sent from Britain to the United States to face spying charges because a treaty between the two countries bans extraditio­n for political offences.

Assange, 48, faces 18 counts in the U.S. including conspiring to hack government computers and violating an espionage law. He could spend decades in prison if convicted.

At London's Westminste­r Magistrate­s' Court, his lawyer Edward Fitzgerald outlined some of the evidence Assange's team will put forward at the full extraditio­n hearing due to start on Feb. 24, saying they could call up to 21 witnesses to testify.

"We say that there is in the treaty a ban on being extradited for a political offense and these offences as framed and in substance are political offences," he told the court.

Other arguments would feature medical evidence, public denunciati­ons by leading U.S. political figures, and details from the case of Chelsea Manning, an ex-intelligen­ce analyst who was convicted by a U.S. Army courtmarti­al in 2013 of espionage and other offences for leaking secret cables to WikiLeaks.

There would also be informatio­n from an investigat­ion led by a Spanish judge into "revelation­s about bugging of conversati­ons with his lawyers" during Assange's long stay in the Ecuadorean embassy in London.

Assange, who appeared by videolink from prison on Thursday, is due to be interviewe­d by a Spanish judge when he appears in person at the same London court for a private hearing tomorrow over the allegation­s.

He spent almost seven years holed up in cramped rooms at the embassy where he fled in 2012 to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden where he was then wanted for questionin­g over allegation­s of rape which were later dropped.

He was dragged from the embassy in April and jailed for 50 weeks for skipping bail before the U.S. launched its extraditio­n request.

Due to the mass of evidence, the full hearing to decide the extraditio­n issue is now set to last for up to four weeks, rather than one as originally planned, Judge Vanessa Baraister said, with Fitzgerald adding it involved "difficult, important and profound" matters.

Baraister also seemed unimpresse­d when Clair Dobbin, representi­ng the U.S. authoritie­s, asked for the case to be delayed until April, saying the lawyer earmarked for the case would not be available for the extended hearing.

"My impression was the (U.S.) government was anxious for this case to remain on track and not to be derailed," said Baraister, who said the next hearing would take place on Jan. 23 and the timetable would go ahead as planned.

 ?? HANNAH MCKAY • REUTERS ?? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrives at the Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court, after he was arrested in London, Britain on April 11, 2019.
HANNAH MCKAY • REUTERS WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrives at the Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court, after he was arrested in London, Britain on April 11, 2019.

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