The Scotsman

Assange facing extraditio­n to the US

● Wikileaks founder carried out in handcuffs

- By GEORGINA STUBBS

Julian Assange gives the thumbs up after he was arrested and forcibly removed from the Ecuadorian embassy in London almost seven years after he first sought refuge there.

Julian Assange faces up to five years in a US prison after he was arrested and forcibly removed from the Ecuadorian embassy in London almost seven years after he sought refuge there.

Police detained the Wikileaks founder after the Ecuadorian government withdrew his asylum, blaming his interferen­ce in internatio­nal affairs and being discourteo­us to embassy staff.

The 47-year-old appeared at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court yesterday and was found guilty of breaching his bail. He faces a jail sentence of up to 12 months when he is sentenced later at Crown Court.

He is also facing extraditio­n to America on charges of conspiring to break into a classified government computer, a charge the US Department of Justice said could attract a maximum jail sentence of five years.

The US accuses Assange of assisting Chelsea Manning, a former US intelligen­ce analyst, in breaking a password that helped her infiltrate Pentagon computers.

Assange was remanded in custody and will next appear at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on 2 May via prison video-link in relation to the extraditio­n.

Scotland Yard said that Assange was held for failing to appear in court in June 2012 and “further arrested on behalf of the United States authoritie­s, at 10.53am after his arrival at a central London police station”.

Assange, with his hair tied into a pony tail and sporting a long beard, was seen shouting and gesticulat­ing as he was carried from the Ecuadorian embassy building in handcuffs by seven men and put into a waiting van shortly after 10am yesterday.

UK government ministers welcomed the move with both Home Secretary Sajid Javid and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt tweeting that “no-one is above the law”.

But Wikileaks said Ecuador had acted illegally in terminatin­g Assange’s political asylum “in violation of internatio­nal law”.

Assange, an Australian, came to prominence after Wikileaks began releasing hundreds of thousands of classified US diplomatic cables.

But in 2010 an arrest warrant was issued for him for two separate allegation­s, one of rape and one of molestatio­n, after he visited Sweden for a speaking trip.

Assange launched a legal battle against extraditio­n to Sweden from the UK but when that failed he entered the embassy, requesting political asylum.

Assange refused to leave, claiming he would be extradited to the US for questionin­g over the activities of Wikileaks if he did so.

The Ecuadorian government at the time was sympatheti­c to his cause but a regime change in 2017 heralded a less supportive approach and, after 2,487 days in the embassy building in the shadow of Harrods, he was finally removed.

In May 2017, Sweden’s top prosecutor dropped a longrunnin­g inquiry into a rape claim against Assange.

Earlier the Ecuadorian ambassador to Britain, Jaime Marchan, said that Assange was disrespect­ful, “continuall­y a problem” and interfered in elections, politics and the internal affairs of other countries.

Officers detained Assange after the Ecuadorian government withdrew his asylum, blaming his “repeated violations” of “internatio­nal convention­s and daily-life protocols”.

“He was continuall­y a problem to us,” Mr Marchan said.

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MAIN PICTURE: JACK TAYLOR/GETTY IMAGES
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Assange is driven from the embassy; Ecuador’s foreign minister Jose Valencia; backer Vivienne Westwood at court; supporter Kyle Ferran at the embassy; the UK’S minister for Europe and the Americas Alan Duncan at a press conference
Clockwise from main: Assange is driven from the embassy; Ecuador’s foreign minister Jose Valencia; backer Vivienne Westwood at court; supporter Kyle Ferran at the embassy; the UK’S minister for Europe and the Americas Alan Duncan at a press conference
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