Khaleej Times

Prosecutor­s question Assange

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london — Wiki Leaks founder Julian Assange was being questioned by prosecutor­s on Monday at the Ecuadoran embassy in London in the latest twist in the long-running legal battle over a rape allegation against him.

Swedish prosecutor Ingrid Is-gren, who will be present while Assange is questioned by an Ecuadoran prosecutor, entered the embassy building shortly before 1000 GMT, an AFP photograph­er said.

Assange’s lawyer Per Samuelsson has said the questionin­g, which has been delayed in the past because of diplomatic disagreeme­nts between Ecuador and Sweden, could last several days.

“I am very hopeful... Objectivel­y, there is no doubt that everything happened as Assange said it did,” Samuelsson told Sweden’s TT news agency.

“Free Assange” and “You Won’t Stop Wikileaks” read banners held up by a small group of protesters outside the embassy as the officials arrived.

“Freedom Loving People of the World Say Thank You Ecuador!” read another banner hung under the balcony from which Assange has sometimes addressed supporters. A Swedish police inspector will also attend the questionin­g and investigat­ors plan to take a DNA sample from Assange, subject to his agreement.

The creator of the secret-spilling website has been holed up in the red-brick building behind Harrods luxury department store for more than four years. The 45-year-old Australian sought refuge in the embassy in June 2012 after Swedish prosecutor­s issued a European arrest warrant against him, over allegation­s of rape and sexual assault filed by two women who met Assange during a 2010 trip to Sweden. He denied the claims, saying they were politicall­y motivated, and insisting his sexual encounters with the two women were consensual.

He has refused to travel to Sweden for questionin­g, fearing he would be extradited to the United States over Wiki Leaks’ release of 500,000 secret military files on the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

Swedish prosecutor­s dropped the sexual assault probe last year after the five-year statute of limitation­s expired. —

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