Business Day

WikiLeaks founder Assange arrested

‘No extraditio­n to a country with death penalty’

- Agency Staff Show Truman /AFP

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s nearly seven-year hideout in Ecuador’s London embassy abruptly ended when police entered the building and arrested him.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s nearly seven-year hideout in Ecuador’s London embassy abruptly ended when police entered the building and arrested him ahead of possible extraditio­n to the US.

Russian video news agency Ruptly showed a frantic-looking Assange his worn face framed by a large white beard and a shock of grey hair being huddled out of the building by plaincloth­es security officers and pulled into a waiting police van.

Assange allegedly shouted “UK must resist” as he was being dragged into the van.

Assange had been living at the embassy in London’s plush Knightsbri­dge district since 2012 when he sought refuge there after being accused of sexual assault in Sweden allegation­s that have since been dropped.

A British police statement said Assange was then “further arrested on behalf of the US authoritie­s, after his arrival at a central London police station. This is an extraditio­n warrant under section 73 of the Extraditio­n Act.”

WikiLeaks accused Ecuador of breaching internatio­nal law by withdrawin­g his asylum. “Ecuador has illegally terminated Assange political asylum in violation of internatio­nal law,” it said on Twitter.

Assange is wanted by Britain for violating prior bail conditions

a minor charge that WikiLeaks fears will be used as a pretext for extraditin­g him to the US. There he potentiall­y faces a far more serious case linked to the publicatio­n of classified US defence material.

Britain’s Europe and US minister Alan Duncan said London was “very grateful to the government of Ecuador under president [Lenin] Moreno for the action they have taken”.

Moreno said he “asked Great Britain for the guarantee that Mr Assange will not be extradited to any country in which he could suffer torture or face the death penalty. The British government has confirmed this in writing.”

The US applies the death penalty in both federal and state courts. Treason charges are punishable by death in times of war, but Washington has refused to confirm reports that it had indicted Assange on unspecifie­d charges.

Ecuador’s former leader Rafael Correa called Moreno “the greatest traitor in Ecuadorian and Latin American history”, who has committed “a crime that humanity will never forget”.

Assange’s case has opened up explosive debate about security and free speech. His supporters view him as a crusader who fearlessly exposes injustices such as torture and alleged war crimes committed by the US in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

The 47-year-old Australian’s critics accuse him of cosying up to authoritar­ian leaders such as Russian President Vladimir Putin and putting Americans’ lives at risk.

Fugitive former US government contractor Edward Snowden himself wanted for leaking details of secret US surveillan­ce programmes called Assange’s arrest a “dark moment for press freedom”.

Russian foreign ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova accused Britain of “strangling freedom”.

Assange’s mother, Christine, tweeted that she had been advised that her son faces up to 12 months in a British prison. “Our focus is as always to stop a US extraditio­n,” she wrote.

Assange’s lawyer, Jennifer Robinson, also raised the possibilit­y of her client being sent to face US justice.

“Just confirmed: #Assange has been arrested not just for breach of bail conditions but also in relation to a US extraditio­n request,” Robinson tweeted.

WikiLeaks had claimed that it was being blackmaile­d by dubious characters who had obtained security camera footage of Assange inside the embassy.

WikiLeaks editor Kristinn Hrafnsson accused Ecuador authoritie­s of gathering the images, as well as copies of private documents prepared for Assange by his lawyers.

Hrafnsson said these had then found their way into the hands of a group in Spain that was demanding $3m not to publish them.

The documents include thousands of photograph­s and gigabytes of video footage showing Assange meeting lawyers and visitors and of him receiving a medical check-up.

“Since Moreno took power in Ecuador in 2017, Julian Assange has been living in a

type [surveillan­ce] situation,” Hrafnsson said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? End of asylum:
A police van with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange inside. He was arrested, in London, Britain, on Thursday.
/Reuters End of asylum: A police van with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange inside. He was arrested, in London, Britain, on Thursday.

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