Assange alleged victims 'relieved': lawyer

Two women who accused Julian Assange of rape and sexual assault are 'relieved' by a ruling ordering the WikiLeaks founder's extradition to Sweden, their lawyer says.

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Two women who accused Julian Assange of rape and sexual assault are 'relieved' by a London court ruling ordering the WikiLeaks founder's extradition to Sweden for questioning, their lawyer says.

"They feel a certain degree of relief," lawyer Claes Borgstroem told the TT news agency shortly after Assange lost a bitter legal battle on Wednesday to block his extradition to the Scandinavian country.

"It has been very trying for them to live with this uncertainty, especially since they themselves have found themselves attacked," he said, referring to allegations spread especially on social media that the women's accusations were motivated by secret agendas aimed at bringing down WikiLeaks.

Two judges at the High Court in London rejected Wednesday arguments by the 40-year-old Australian, whose anti-secrecy website has enraged governments around the world, that his extradition would be unlawful.

Swedish prosecutors want to question Assange on suspicion of two counts of sexual molestation and an accusation of rape made by Borgstroem's clients in August 2010.

"He has really been grabbing at every straw, and frankly I don't understand why he is acting like this. Maybe he has had bad advisers," Borgstroem suggested of Assange's refusal until now to return to Sweden for questioning.

Assange's Swedish lawyer Bjoern Hurtig, meanwhile, said he was not surprised by Wednesday's verdict.

"This was not unexpected, but it was of course bad news for Assange," he told TT, adding he did not yet know if his client would appeal the verdict to Britain's Supreme Court.

Assange has 14 days to decide whether he will try to take the case to the highest legal authority in Britain.

Hurtig meanwhile insisted that Assange had never been unwilling to travel to Sweden, but that "he doesn't want to be taken into custody."

He also brushed aside vocal criticism since the case came to light of the Swedish judicial system, insisting it "generally holds a very high standard."



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2 min read
Published 3 November 2011 12:00pm
Updated 26 August 2013 9:20am
Source: AFP


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