UK court sets Assange U.S. extradition
hearing for February 2020
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[June 14, 2019]
By Andrew MacAskill
LONDON (Reuters) - The full extradition
hearing to decide whether Wikileaks founder Julian Assange should be
sent to the United States to face accusations including spying charges
will take place in February next year, a London court ruled on Friday.
Assange, 47, faces 18 counts in the U.S. including conspiring to hack
government computers and violating an espionage law. He could spend
decades in prison if convicted.
"It is important that people aren’t fooled into believing that WikiLeaks
is anything but a publisher," said Assange, who appeared by videolink
from a London prison, dressed in a grey T-shirt and wearing black-framed
glasses.
"The U.S. government has tried to mislead the press," he told
Westminster Magistrates' Court.
As Ben Brandon, the lawyer representing the United States, ran through a
summary of the charges against him including that he had cracked a U.S.
Defense network password, Assange said: "I didn’t hack anything."
Australian-born Assange came to prominence when WikiLeaks published
hundreds of thousands of secret U.S. diplomatic cables in 2010, angering
Washington which said he had put lives at risk.
His supporters hail him as a hero for exposing what they describe as
abuse of power by modern states and for championing free speech.
He spent almost seven years holed up in cramped rooms at the Ecuadorean
embassy in London where he fled in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden
where he was wanted for questioning over allegations of rape.
He was dragged from the embassy on April 11 and jailed for 50 weeks for
skipping bail.
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A demonstrator holding a placard protests outside of Westminster
Magistrates Court, where a case hearing for U.S. extradition of
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is held, in London, Britain, June
14, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay - RC17C61BCDA0
The United States has since charged Assange with numerous offences
including espionage, saying he unlawfully published the names of
secret sources and conspiring with ex-Army intelligence analyst
Chelsea Manning to obtain access to classified information.
Brandon said Assange's actions had been dangerous and "by publishing
the unredacted material Mr Assange created grave and imminent risk
that many intelligence sources, including journalists, human rights
defenders and political activists would suffer serious physical harm
or arbitrary detention."
However, Assange's lawyer Mark Summers said the charges were an
"outrageous and full fronted assault on journalist rights and free
speech" and that his client did not have access to a computer to
allow him to follow the case.
He told the court that Assange, who had been too ill to attend the
previous hearing in May, was receiving healthcare. He did not
elaborate.
Judge Emma Arbuthnot said the full extradition case would be heard
in the week starting Feb. 25 next year.
(Writing by Michael Holden; editing by Stephen Addison)
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