Reuters, 04/02 17:05 CET
By Johan Ahlander and Guy Faulconbridge
STOCKHOLM/LONDON (Reuters) –
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s three-and-a-half-year stay in the
Ecuadorian embassy in London to avoid rape investigation in Sweden
amounts to ‘arbitrary detention’, a United Nations panel will rule on
Friday.
Assange, a former computer hacker who has been holed up
in the embassy since June 2012, told the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention that he was a political refugee whose rights had been
infringed by being unable to take up asylum in Ecuador.
He denies allegations of rape in 2010 and has portrayed
them as a ploy to have him eventually sent to the United States, where
he could be put on trial over WikiLeaks’ publication of the classified
military and diplomatic documents
Britain said it had never arbitrarily detained Assange
and that the Australian had voluntarily avoided arrest by jumping bail
to flee to the embassy.
But the U.N. panel of outside experts has ruled in Assange’s favour, Sweden said.
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Source: Euronews
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