The Guardian (USA)

Sweden reopens rape case against Julian Assange

- Caroline Davies

Swedish prosecutor­s are to reopen an investigat­ion into a rape allegation against Julian Assange.

The deputy director of public prosecutio­ns, Eva-Marie Persson, announced the decision at a press conference on Monday, saying: “I have today taken the decision to reopen the preliminar­y investigat­ion.”

She said the circumstan­ces allowed for an extraditio­n to Sweden from Britain, and an interview with Assange should be conducted.

“After reviewing the preliminar­y investigat­ion carried out so far, I find that there still exist grounds for Julian Assange to be suspected on probable cause of the charge of rape,” Persson said. “It is my assessment that a new questionin­g of Assange is required.”

With Assange now detained by the UK, “the prerequisi­tes for continuing and completing the investigat­ion are now considered to exist”, she said.

Prosecutor­s dropped the investigat­ion in 2017 because they were unable to proceed while the WikiLeaks founder remained in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. They said at the time that the investigat­ion could be reopened if the situation changed. Assange has always denied the allegation.

Assange, 47, was removed from the embassy last month after the Ecuadorian government abruptly withdrew his asylum. Having spent seven years in the building, he was arrested for breach of bail.

A lawyer for one of the women involved in the Swedish allegation­s subsequent­ly asked for the investigat­ion to be resumed. Assange had also faced an investigat­ion over a second allegation, but this was dropped in 2015 because time had run out. He has denied both allegation­s.

Immediatel­y after his arrest in April, US authoritie­s made a request for Assange’s extraditio­n in a case relating to WikiLeaks’ release of sensitive military and diplomatic documents. He faces allegation­s in the US that he conspired with a former intelligen­ce analyst, Chelsea Manning, to download classified databases. The charge against him carries a sentence of up to five years in prison.

Assange is being held in Belmarsh high-security prison in south London after being sentenced to 50 weeks in jail for a bail violation. He appeared by video link at Westminste­r magistrate­s court on 2 May to say he did not consent to being extradited to the US. The court heard that the extraditio­n process would take “many months” and the case was adjourned until 30 May.

Persson said the British authoritie­s would decide whether the Swedish or US extraditio­n request had priority.

The Swedish allegation­s date back to 2010. Assange unsuccessf­ully fought in the British courts to have the Swedish extraditio­n order and preliminar­y investigat­ion dropped. His lawyers said he feared that if he went to Sweden, authoritie­s could have handed him over to the US to face prosecutio­n over the WikiLeaks case.

The lawyer for the woman who had asked for the investigat­ion to be reopened welcomed the decision saying: “Today we got great news.” It signalled “that no-one stands above the law,” Elisabeth Massi Fritz, told a new conference.

“My client feels great gratitude and she is very hopeful about getting restitutio­n and we both hope that justice will win”, she added.

She said Swedish prosecutor­s would be “forced to take steps quickly to ensure that we have time to get a potential criminal charge in this case.”

WikiLeaks said the reopening of the Swedish investigat­ion would give Assange a chance to clear his name.

“Since Julian Assange was arrested on 11 April 2019 there has been considerab­le political pressure on Sweden to reopen their investigat­ion, but there has always been political pressure surroundin­g this case,” Kristinn Hrafnsson, WikiLeaks’ editor-in-chief, said in a statement. “Its reopening will give Julian a chance to clear his name.”

Hrafnsson criticised the Swedish handling of the case. He said: “This case has been mishandled throughout. After the Swedish prosecutor refused to question Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy for years, it was only when forced by Swedish courts that she travelled to London to finally question Assange.

“Then Sweden wanted to drop its arrest warrant for Assange as early as 2013. It was the British government that insisted that the case against him continue. Since the investigat­ion was closed in 2017, we have received reports of the destructio­n of records and correspond­ence on behalf of UK and Swedish authoritie­s, surely an impediment to a thorough investigat­ion.

“Assange was always willing to answer any questions from the Swedish authoritie­s and repeatedly offered to do so, over six years. The widespread media assertion that Assange ‘evaded’ Swedish questionin­g is false. This investigat­ion has been dropped before and its reopening will give Julian a chance to clear his name.”

Assange’s Swedish lawyer, Per Samuelson, told the Swedish broadcaste­r SVT that he was “very surprised” by the decision to reopen the case, saying it was “embarrassi­ng” for Sweden.

Nick Vamos, a former head of extraditio­n at the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, told Reuters news agency that UK extraditio­n proceeding­s should not take more than 18 months.

 ??  ?? Julian Assange at court in London on 1 May to be sentenced for breach of bail. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Julian Assange at court in London on 1 May to be sentenced for breach of bail. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States