The Star Malaysia

UN treading on thin ice in Assange case

- DR A SOORIAN Seremban

IT is shocking that the United Nations is supporting Julian Assange, a computer hacker, who published hundreds of thousands of classified United States diplomatic cables, now wanted in Sweden for a rape investigat­ion.

He had on his own free will got holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy asking for asylum and electing to stay put there indefinite­ly to escape extraditio­n to formally face charges in Sweden.

The UN is treading on very thin ice in providing support for a fugitives whose member countries are seeking to try them for serious offences.

Imagine the UN trying to defend Assange by saying that he was arbitraril­y detained which argument does not hold water by any stretch of the imaginatio­n.

Assange, the accused, is dictating terms to the internatio­nal community which is untenable.

Any reasonable man would expect him to walk out of his self-created isolation and face his accusers like a man instead of flinging flimsy excuses that he was being “detained”.

The UN, for some reason best known to itself, is ultra-concerned about the “rights” of Assange than those of the women who accuse him of serious sexual crimes.

In the past the UN had unreserved­ly condemned sexual acts like rape against “comfort women” in World War 11 but what do we see now? It seems to have moved away perilously from that noble position of integrity.

The UN must jealously guard its credibilit­y as a fair, just and independen­t body and not risk taking sides where it is seemingly seen to be condoning sexual crimes.

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