The Mercury News

Lawmakers: Assange should face rape charges in Sweden

- By Deutsche Presse-Agentur

LONDON >> Seventy British lawmakers urged the government Saturday to prioritize WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s extraditio­n to Sweden if prosecutor­s reopen an investigat­ion of an alleged rape there.

Stella Creasy of the opposition Labour Party said the group wanted to “stand with victims of sexual violence,” amid concerns that the Swedish case could be sidelined as the Conservati­ve government focuses on a U.S. extraditio­n request for Assange.

Creasy, who organized an open letter from the group, urged British ministers to be “champions of action to ensure Julian Assange faces Swedish authoritie­s and is extradited there if they so request.”

The rape allegation came after Assange’s visit to Sweden in 2010. He departed Sweden for Britain, and in 2012, he fled to the Ecuadorian Embassy in London after he lost a legal battle against extraditio­n to Sweden amid fears he would be handed over to U.S. authoritie­s for Wikileaks’ publicatio­n of top-secret U.S. diplomatic cables.

Assange, an Australian national, lived in the embassy for seven years. But his relationsh­ip with his hosts became strained, and British police dragged the 47-year-old out of the building Thursday after Quito revoked his asylum status.

The police initially charged Assange with breaching bail conditions linked to the Swedish extraditio­n request.

The U.S. Justice Department said later Thursday it had charged Assange for conspiring with former U.S. military intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to leak a trove of classified material in 2010.

Swedish prosecutor­s dropped their investigat­ion of the rape allegation in 2017. Assange has always denied the allegation.

Meanwhile, a Swedish man with links to WikiLeaks who was arrested in Ecuador on Thursday remained in pretrial detention on suspicion of planning a cyber attack, judicial authoritie­s in Quito said on Saturday.

The 36-year-old man was arrested as he was attempting to leave on a flight to Japan. His bank accounts have been frozen, and authoritie­s have seized USB sticks and other devices in his flat.

The Swedish Foreign Ministry said Saturday that it was aware of the man’s arrest. Spokeswoma­n Sofia Nahringbau­er told dpa, “He has been offered consular assistance and has access to an attorney.”

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A video grab taken from AFP TV footage shows WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange as he is driven by British police to Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London on Thursday.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES A video grab taken from AFP TV footage shows WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange as he is driven by British police to Westminste­r Magistrate­s Court in London on Thursday.

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