Business Day

Assange starts fight against extraditio­n set to take years

Fears that charges could be changed once he is in US

- Agency Staff London

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange told a court on Thursday he would oppose extraditio­n to the US as the legal process began in London, a day after he was jailed for breaching his bail conditions in another case.

He appeared via videolink at a court in Westminste­r, London, where a lawyer for the US authoritie­s briefly set out his alleged involvemen­t in the release of classified documents.

“I do not wish to surrender myself for extraditio­n for doing journalism that has won many awards and protected many people,” Assange told the magistrate, who set the next hearing for May 30.

The Australian was jailed on Wednesday for 50 weeks for breaking his bail conditions in 2012, when he fled to Ecuador’s London embassy to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden.

He was accused of sexual assault and rape but denied the claims, saying they were linked to the whistleblo­wing work of WikiLeaks.

Assange said he feared they were a pretext to get him in custody and transfer him to the US to face prosecutio­n.

He was dragged out of the embassy and arrested on April 11 after Quito gave him up. The Swedish claims had been dropped, but he was later that day convicted of skipping bail.

The 47-year-old was then confronted with a warrant for extraditio­n to the US. The US indictment charges him with “conspiracy” for working with former US Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to crack a password stored on department of defence computers in March 2010.

Manning passed hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks, exposing US military wrongdoing in the Iraq war and diplomatic secrets about scores of countries.

The charge carries a maximum jail term of five years.

Assange’s supporters, who protested outside the court on Thursday, believe that more serious charges could be filed if he is transferre­d to the US, and he fears the death penalty.

WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson said on Wednesday that all efforts would now be focused on preventing Assange’s extraditio­n to the US. “It will be a question of life and death,” he warned.

In a letter read out in court on Wednesday, however, Assange apologised for skipping bail seven years ago. “I did what I thought at the time was the best or perhaps the only thing that I could have done,” he said “I apologise unreserved­ly.”

The next hearing in the US extraditio­n case is only for further case management. The whole process could take years.

The Swedish claims against Assange date back to 2010, when he was at the centre of a global storm over WikiLeaks’ exposures. The sexual assault claim expired in 2015, but while the rape claim was dropped in 2017 the complainan­t wants the case to be reopened.

If Stockholm makes a formal extraditio­n request, Britain must decide whether to consider it before or after that of the US.

WikiLeaks is back in the news in the US, over its alleged role in the leak of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton’s emails in the 2016 US presidenti­al election./AFP

 ?? /Reuters ?? Support: WikiLeaks editor Kristinn Hrafnsson addresses the media next to lawyer Jennifer Robinson outside Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London, where Wikileaks founder Julian Assange had a US extraditio­n request hearing on Thursday.
/Reuters Support: WikiLeaks editor Kristinn Hrafnsson addresses the media next to lawyer Jennifer Robinson outside Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London, where Wikileaks founder Julian Assange had a US extraditio­n request hearing on Thursday.

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