A British court on Tuesday ruled to keep in place an arrest
warrant for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, thwarting a bid that could have
paved the way for him to le
ave the Ecuadorian embassy in London where he has
spent the last five and a half years.
“I’m not persuaded that the warrant should be withdrawn,”
judge Emma Arbuthnot said in criminal court in London, reading out her
decision.
But Arbuthnot was still considering a further application
from Assange’s lawyers that the arrest warrant be scrapped on public interest
grounds.
Assange entered the embassy in June 2012 to dodge a European
arrest warrant and extradition to Sweden over a 2010 probe in the Scandinavian
country into rape and sexual assault allegations.
Sweden dropped its investigation last year, but British
police are still seeking to arrest Assange for failing to surrender to a court
after violating his bail terms during his unsuccessful battle against
extradition.
Assange’s lawyer Mark Summers had argued in court last week
that the warrant had “lost its purpose and its function”.
He said Assange had been living in conditions “akin to
imprisonment” and his “psychological health” has deteriorated and was “in
serious peril”.
The court heard that the 46-year-old was suffering from a bad
tooth, a frozen shoulder and depression.
But prosecutor Aaron Watkins called Assange’s court bid
“absurd”.
“The proper approach is that when a discrete, standalone
offence of failing to surrender occurs, it always remains open to this court to
secure the arrest,” Watkins said.
Assange has refused to leave the embassy, claiming he fears
being extradited to the United States over WikiLeaks’ publication of secret US
military documents and diplomatic cables in 2010.
US Attorney General Jeff Sessions last year said his arrest
was a “priority”.
‘Face justice’
Assange only very rarely emerges onto the balcony of the
embassy building, citing concerns for his personal safety, but he frequently
takes part in media conferences and campaigns via video link.
Ecuador in December granted citizenship to the
Australian-born Assange, and asked Britain to recognise him as a diplomat, in
an unsuccessful attempt to provide him with immunity and usher him out of its
embassy without the threat of arrest.
But London swiftly rejected the move.
“Ecuador knows that the way to resolve this issue is for
Julian Assange to leave the embassy to face justice,” the British government
said.
Assange has strained the patience of his hosts during his
long stay.
He was publicly reprimanded for interfering in the 2016 US
election after publishing emails from the campaign team of Democrat Hillary
Clinton.
More recently, he drew the ire of Ecuadoran President Lenin
Moreno when he used Twitter to issue messages of support for Catalonia’s
independence drive.
Moreno was forced to respond to complaints from the Spanish
government.
Moreno, in office since 2017, said last month Assange was an
“inherited problem” that had created “more than a nuisance” for his government.
“We hope to have a positive result in the short term,” Moreno
said in an interview with television networks.
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