http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrape

 


Sweden orders WikiLeaks boss arrest over rape claim


by Nina Larson Nina Larson - 39 mins ago

STOCKHOLM (AFP) - A Swedish court ordered
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to be detained on suspicion of rape and
sexual molestation Thursday, and an international warrant will be issued for
his arrest, according to the judge and prosecutor on the case.

"It has been decided that he be detained in absentia," Alan Camitz, a
Stockholm district court judge on the case, told AFP.

Prosecutor Marianne Ny, who had requested the detention earlier Thursday,
meanwhile said an
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> international arrest warrant would soon be issued for the founder of the
whistleblower website.

Assange had been detained in his absence "on probable cause suspected of
rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion," she said in a statement,
adding that "to execute the court?s decision, the next step is to issue an
international arrest warrant."

In an
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> interview with AFP, Ny, the head of the department that oversees
prosecution of sex crimes, explained that "I requested his arrest so we
could carry out an interrogation with Assange. That is the reason."

A warrant was first issued for Assange's arrest on August 20 by another
prosecutor on suspicion he had raped one woman and sexually molested
another, but the warrant was withdrawn just hours later.

Ny reopened the rape probe against the 39-year-old Australian on September
1, but did not request his detention, making it possible for him to leave
Sweden.

"We have exhausted all the normal procedures for getting an interrogation
(and) this investigation has gotten to a point where it is not possible to
go further without interrogating Assange himself," Ny explained Thursday.

She said she did not know where the former hacker was currently and had "no
idea" how to get in touch with him.

Assange's British lawyer Mark Stephens meanwhile said his client was in
London, blasting the
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> prosecutor's decision to seek his arrest and describing the case as "not
a prosecution, but a persecution."

Speaking before the Swedish court made its decision, Stephens said his
client had been in London "this morning" but he did not know his whereabouts
later in the day.

"He hasn't run away from this. He has sought to vindicate his name,"
Stephens told AFP.

In a statement issued before the
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> court ruling, Stephens insisted that "despite his right to silence, my
client has repeatedly offered to be interviewed, first in Sweden before he
left, and then subsequently in the UK (including at the Swedish Embassy),
either in person or by telephone, videoconferencing or email and he has also
offered to make a sworn statement on affidavit.

"All of these offers have been flatly refused by a prosecutor who is abusing
her powers."

Assange's lawyer in Sweden, Bjoern Hurtig, also said the prosecutor's
petition was "exaggerated" and "out of proportion."

He stressed to AFP that his client "is absolutely prepared to come to Sweden
(and) wants to cooperate," and had even proposed some dates that would work
for him, "but we have not been able to agree."

Ny meanwhile said she was not aware of any offers from Assange to come to
Sweden for an interrogation.

"I would like to stress that the district court shared our opinion that
there is flight risk in this case," she said, adding that the international
arrest warrant would be issued "soon" through
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101118/wl_afp/swedencrimeinternetwikileaksrap
e> Interpol. 

The WikiLeaks founder himself has previously hinted the allegations against
him could be part of a "smear campaign" aimed at discrediting his website,
which is locked in a row with the Pentagon over the release of secret US
documents about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

WikiLeaks last month published an unprecedented 400,000 classified US
documents on the Iraq war and posted 77,000 secret US files on the Afghan
conflict in July. 

As for the two women at the centre of the Swedish rape and sexual
molestation probe, whose names have not officially been made public, Assange
admitted in a September interview with AFP that he had met them both, but
refused to say if he had sex with either of them, calling it "a private
matter." 

The two women's lawyer Claes Borgstroem meanwhile said Thursday he was
relieved that Ny had requested Assange's arrest. 

"Finally. This should have been done earlier," he told the TT news agency. 

Two days before the allegations against Assange were made public in August,
he had applied for a work and residency permit in Sweden, where some of
Wikileaks' servers are located, but his application was turned down on
October 18.

 



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