This looks like an attempt to hurry his extradiction to the US to face charges.
Swedish
court rejects delay of Assange hearing over ill-health: lawyer
29
May, 2019
STOCKHOLM
(Reuters) - A Swedish court has rejected a request to postpone a
planned hearing to rule on the detention in absentia of WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange as part of an ongoing investigation into
alleged rape, a defense lawyer for Assange said on Tuesday
The
Swedish prosecutor heading an investigation into the rape allegation
against Assange, which he denies, this month filed a request with a
local court for him to be detained with a hearing scheduled for June
3.
Swedish
defense lawyer Per Samuelson told Reuters he had visited Assange in
British custody on Friday after which he had sought to have the
hearing postponed.
“One
of the reasons is that Assange’s health situation on Friday was
such that it was not possible to conduct a normal conversation with
him,” Samuelson said.
“I
meant that it should be postponed until I had time to meet again and
go through the issues in peace and quiet. I suggested no specific
date and meant it should be postponed until everything was ready, but
the district court has now decided that this won’t happen.”
The
Uppsala district court, where the hearing is due to take place, was
not immediately available for comment. A prosecutors’ office
spokesman declined to comment.
Sweden
reopened the rape investigation in early May. It was begun in 2010
but dropped in 2017 years after Assange took refuge in Ecuador’s
London embassy. Assange was arrested in London last month after
spending seven years inside the embassy.
If
the court order is granted, it would be the first step in a process
to have Assange extradited from Britain, where he is serving a
50-week sentence for skipping bail.
U.S.
authorities are separately seeking to extradite Assange on charges
relating to the public release by Wikileaks of a cache of secret
documents and last week unveiled 17 new criminal charges against him,
including espionage.
The
British courts will have to rule on the two extradition requests,
with the home secretary having the final say on which one takes
precedence.
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