WikiLeaks' Assange testifies in embassy spying case
WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange on Friday testified in his legal case against a Spanish private
security firm that he claims spied on him while he was holed up in the
Ecuadoran embassy in London.
Assange, who is currently serving time at a
high-security prison in Britain, was to answer questions from a judge at
Spain's National Court in Madrid, testifying by videoconference from
Westminster Magistrates Court in London, his legal team said.
Spain's top criminal court is investigating
whether Undercover Global Ltd, which was responsible for security at the
embassy, spied on Assange and passed on information to the United
States.
The case is key to Assange's efforts to fight
an extradition request by the US Justice Department which is pushing to
have him put on trial for leaking hundreds of thousands of secret US
military and diplomatic documents in 2010.
"The case being investigated in Spain states
that Mr Assange has been subjected to widespread interference on a
massive scale by the American authorities, violating his confidential
communications with his lawyers, among other rights," his legal team
said.
"The information gathered by this firm -- through
the alleged use of video cameras which also captured audio, hidden
microphones, copying identity documents, monitoring the electronic
devices and mobile phones of visitors, among other things -- ended up in
the hands of the US intelligence services."
There was a "huge body of evidence" to back
the claim, coming from both company data as well as from protected
witnesses who were formerly employed by the firm, the source said.
As well as installing cameras, Undercover
Global is suspected of installing microphones in places as diverse as
the base of a fire extinguisher and in the women's toilets, where
Assange held many meetings for fear of being spied on.
'Britain must refuse extradition'
They were allegedly able to record discussions
with his lawyers as well as details of medical visits, with the
information then transferred to servers that were accessible to the US
intelligence services.
Assange took refuge inside the Ecuadoran
embassy in 2012, fleeing what he claimed was a politically-motivated
extradition order for his return to Sweden for questioning in a sexual
assault case, which was dropped last month.
After Quito gave him up in April, Assange was
arrested and is currently serving 50 weeks in a London jail for
breaching his bail conditions when he entered the embassy.
The 48-year-old is also fighting a request to
extradite him to the United States where he faces 18 charges, mostly
relating the obtention and dissemination of classified information over
WikiLeaks' publication of military documents and diplomatic cables.
His legal team said that given the alleged
spying at the embassy, it "underlines the need for the British judicial
system to refuse to hand him over to the United States" where there were
no guarantees for his safety.
Friday's hearing came at the request of the
National Court, which is investigating both Undercover Global and its
owner David Morales, who was arrested in September but is out on
conditional release.
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