Swedish court upholds detention order on Assange

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STOCKHOLM (AP) — A Swedish court on Wednesday upheld its detention order on Julian Assange, reaffirming
the legal basis for an international warrant for the WikiLeaks founder which has kept him hiding in the
Ecuadorean Embassy in London for two years.
Assange’s lawyers said they will appeal the Stockholm district court’s decision.
No charges have been brought against Assange in Sweden but he is wanted for questioning by police over
allegations of sexual misconduct and rape involving two women he met during a visit to the Scandinavian
country in 2010.
Prosecutors have declined to allow the possibility of questioning him in London.
Even if Sweden had dropped its case against Assange, he would face immediate arrest by British police for
violating his bail conditions when he fled officials and sought refuge at the embassy. The police have
maintained a constant presence outside the embassy since then.
In a meeting last month with reporters at the embassy to mark his second year of hiding, Assange said had
no intention of going to Sweden because he has no guarantees he wouldn’t subsequently be sent to the
United States, where an investigation into WikiLeaks’ dissemination of hundreds of thousands of
classified U.S. documents remains live.

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